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Display the image from the activity. Tell students that their task is to identify and label radian angle measurements on a circle that is centered at . Each angle is measured by starting from the positive -axis and then rotating counterclockwise. Use two pencils to demonstrate how to think about the first given angle of radians by starting with both pencils lined up at on the -axis, and then rotating the top pencil to line up with the angle while keeping one end at the origin.
Arrange students in groups of 2–3. Give 2–5 minutes of quiet work time, and then tell students to check their work and share their strategies for identifying all the angles with their group before continuing the rest of the activity.
Here is a circle with a radius of 1 and with some radii drawn.
Draw and label these angles with the positive -axis as the starting ray for each angle, and moving in the counterclockwise direction. Four of these angles, one in each quadrant, have been drawn for you. Be prepared to share any strategies that you used to make the angles.
If students are having trouble labeling their angles, consider saying:
“Tell me more about the relationship between and and where they are on the circle.”
“How could you use the location of to help you draw and label the other angles related to ?”
During the discussion, display a unit circle with all 24 angles marked off, like the one in the Student Response. Begin by selecting previously identified students to share their strategies for marking off angles from the 4 that were given.
Next, ask questions to highlight the structure of the angles in the unit circle:
As they work, select students with different effective strategies, such as those described in the Activity Narrative, to share later.
Arrange students in groups of 4. Assign one person in each group the angles in the right half of the unit circle, one person the left half, one person the upper half, and one person the lower half. Encourage students either to make a table of values, with columns for angle, horizontal coordinate, and vertical coordinate, or to add coordinates onto the unit circle from the previously completed activity “Angles Everywhere.”
Your teacher will assign you a section of the unit circle.
The goal of this discussion is for students to highlight important patterns in the coordinates of the 24 points around the unit circle. Some of these patterns include: