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Demonstrate how to make a triangle by drawing one side on the graph paper, marking the second side length on one long strip, and using another long strip to measure the third side. Then demonstrate how to use a protractor to measure the angle between two sides of the triangle.
The table given purposefully looks similar to the table in an earlier lesson. Tell students that they can use side lengths from a previous activity or they can start fresh with new triangle side lengths. Remind students to be sure to pick side lengths that form a triangle.
Select students who make the connection that larger angles are opposite longer sides to share during the Activity Synthesis. Aim to elicit both key mathematical ideas and a variety of student voices, especially from students who haven’t shared recently.
| length | length | length | angle (the angle between sides and ) |
Display the applet for all to see. Ask students, “What did you notice as you changed the size of angle ?” Invite previously selected students to share their thinking. As they share, use the applet to help illustrate students' reasoning.
The goal is for students to start to notice that, in a triangle, larger angles are opposite longer sides and longer sides are opposite larger angles. It is okay if students do not use this language yet. Students will have more opportunities to develop their understanding in the next activity.
Is this triangle a right triangle? Explain or show your reasoning.
The purpose of this discussion is to start with a right triangle and determine what happens when two sides stay the same length and the third side gets longer or shorter.
Display the triangles for all to see. Invite students to share their responses. If students are not using the term “opposite” to describe the angle across from a side in a triangle, ask students, “What do you recall it means for an angle to be opposite a side in a triangle? What about a side opposite an angle?” If students have not yet said that, in a triangle, larger angles are opposite longer sides and longer sides are opposite larger angles, direct students’ attention to angles , , and . Ask students, “What do you notice about the sides opposite angles , , and ?” (As the side opposite an angle gets longer or shorter, the angle gets bigger or smaller, respectively.) Students will continue this discussion in the Lesson Synthesis and formalize the relationship between side lengths and angles in a triangle.
If students do not notice a relationship between the length of side and it’s opposite angle, consider saying: