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Which 3 go together?
The purpose of this activity is for students to analyze examples and nonexamples of triangles. As students compare examples and non-examples, they identify and articulate the defining attributes of triangles (MP6).
These are triangles.
What is the same about all these triangles?
These are not triangles.
What makes these shapes different from the triangles?
Centimeter Dot Paper - Standard
The purpose of this activity is for students to draw triangles. Students use a dot grid to draw triangles and shapes that are not triangles. Students may use the shape cards to visualize and draw shapes.
The dot grid is included in the student book. A blackline master is also attached if more dot paper is needed.
Monitor for some triangles and some shapes that are not triangles to share during the Lesson Synthesis.
Choose 3 dots. Connect the dots.
Draw 3 different triangles.
None
The purpose of this activity is for students to choose from activities that offer practice counting, adding and subtracting, or working with shapes. Students choose from previously introduced stages of these centers:
Choose a center.
Geoblocks
How Are They the Same?
Compare
Counting Collections
“Today we looked at shapes that are triangles and shapes that are not triangles. Then we drew our own shapes.”
Display the shapes drawn in a previous activity. “How can we tell if these shapes are triangles or not?” (If they are triangles they will have 3 sides and 3 corners, the sides will be straight, and the shapes will be closed.)
As needed, "We learned that triangles are flat shapes that have three straight sides and three corners."