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Some students may think that can be reflected over line onto . Ask them what we would need to know for that to work.
Arrange students in groups of 2, and distribute pre-cut cards. Tell them that in this activity, they will sort some cards into categories of their choosing. When they sort the images, they should work with their partner to come up with categories.
Allow students to familiarize themselves with the representations on the cards:
Attend to the language that students use to describe their categories and images, giving them opportunities to describe their images more precisely. Highlight the use of terms like “congruent,” “polygon,” and “transformation.” After a brief discussion, invite students to complete the remaining questions.
Your teacher will give you a set of cards that show transformations of figures. Sort the cards into categories of your choosing. Be prepared to explain the meaning of your categories.
For each card with a rigid transformation, write a sequence of rotations, translations, and reflections to get from the original figure to the image. Be precise.
The purpose of this discussion is to re-emphasize that translations, rotations, and reflections are rigid transformations and to work on describing those transformations without the structure of a grid.
Invite students to share their strategies for the card with triangles and . If any student first translated to line up one pair of corresponding vertices and then rotated it, call on that student to share their method. If not, discuss the difficulty of estimating where to place the center of rotation so that a single rotation will definitely line up all three points. Demonstrate the alternative by translating by the directed line segment from to so those points coincide and then rotating by the angle formed at vertex so all three points coincide.
Wait on a detailed discussion of the transformation of the card with , as it will be the focus of the next activity.
Tell students to refer to the card from the previous activity with figure .
Diego says, “I see why a reflection could take to , but I’m not sure where the line of reflection is. I’ll just guess.”
Invite a few students to share their responses with the class. Highlight any improvements over previous justifications such as good use of a well-labeled diagram. For each transformation a student suggests, ask them “What points coincide now?”