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The purpose of this Notice and Wonder is to consider examples of some of the shapes that students will build and study in this lesson, namely squares and rhombuses. The key attributes students may notice in the shapes are the side lengths and the angles.
¿Qué observas? ¿Qué te preguntas?
Construye un cuadrado con 4 palillos. ¿Cómo sabes que este es un cuadrado?
Usa los mismos 4 palillos para construir esta figura. ¿Qué se mantuvo igual? ¿Qué cambió?
Usa los mismos 6 palillos para construir esta figura. ¿Qué se mantuvo igual? ¿Qué cambió?
“Un cuadrilátero con 4 lados iguales es un rombo” // “A quadrilateral with 4 equal sides is a rhombus.”
The purpose of this activity is for students to determine if quadrilaterals are squares, rhombuses, rectangles, or parallelograms. Then they begin to outline the relationships between these different types of quadrilaterals, leading to the overall hierarchy of quadrilateral types which students investigate more fully in the next lesson.
When students draw quadrilaterals belonging or not belonging to different categories they reason abstractly and quantitatively (MP2), using the definitions of the shapes to inform their drawings.
This activity uses MLR3 Critique, Correct, Clarify. Advances: reading, writing, representing
Dibuja 3 cuadriláteros distintos en la cuadrícula. Al menos uno debe ser un paralelogramo.
MLR3 Critique, Correct, Clarify
“Hoy relacionamos cuadrados con rombos y relacionamos rectángulos con paralelogramos” // “Today we related squares to rhombuses and rectangles to parallelograms.”
“¿Qué hace que un cuadrado sea un rombo?” // “What makes a square a rhombus?” (It has 4 equal sides.)
“¿Son todos los rombos cuadrados?” // “Are all rhombuses squares?” (No, there are rhombuses that have no right angles and they are not squares.)
Display or draw a diagram like this or use the diagram from a previous lesson.
“Este diagrama muestra la jerarquía de los cuadriláteros” // “This diagram shows the hierarchy of quadrilaterals.”
“¿En dónde dibujaríamos un rombo que no sea un cuadrado?” // “Where would we draw a rhombus that is not a square?” (In the rhombus box, but not the square box.)
“¿Cómo muestra este diagrama que un cuadrado es un rombo y un paralelogramo?” // “How does this diagram show that a square is a rhombus and a parallelogram?” (It shows the squares inside the rhombuses that are inside the parallelograms, which means that a shape that is a square is also a rhombus and a parallelogram.)