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Find the value of each expression mentally.
The purpose of this activity is for students to identify defining and nondefining attributes of rectangles and squares. Students begin by noticing what is the same about four rectangles (one of which is a square). As they notice, they identify some defining attributes (four sides, four square corners, pairs of sides that are the same length). Then given nonexamples of rectangles, students notice what makes the nonexamples different from the examples. Some, but not all, of the attributes students mention will be defining attributes. For example, students may notice that a rectangle has two long sides and two short sides, but this isn't a defining attribute.
In the Activity Synthesis, students identify squares and rectangles from their card set and the teacher supports students in developing statements about the defining attributes of these shapes. This gives students an opportunity to use language precisely to distinguish squares and rectangles (MP6).
These are rectangles.
What is the same about all these rectangles?
These are not rectangles.
What makes these shapes different from the rectangles?
These are squares.
What is the same about all these squares?
These are not squares.
What makes these shapes different from the squares?
Centimeter Dot Paper - Standard
The purpose of this activity is for students to draw rectangles and squares. Students use dot paper to draw the shapes. As they draw, they attend to the attributes of rectangles and squares. Students also draw shapes that are not rectangles or squares. They may use the shape cards to visualize and draw shapes.
The dot paper is included in the student book. A blackline master is also attached if more dot paper is needed.
Draw 5 rectangles.
How do you know these are rectangles?
Draw 3 shapes that are not rectangles.
How do you know these are not rectangles?
Draw 5 squares.
How do you know these are squares?
Draw 3 shapes that are not squares.
How do you know these are not squares?
“Today we learned about squares and rectangles.”
”What is true about all rectangles?” (Rectangles have 4 straight sides, 4 square corners, all sides touch, and opposite sides are the same length.)
“What is true about some rectangles, but not all rectangles?” (They can be colored. They can have 2 long sides and 2 short sides. They can have all sides the same, like squares.)
As needed, "We learned that a rectangle is a flat shape with 4 straight sides and 4 square corners. We also saw that a square is a special rectangle with all side lengths the same."