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Find the value of each expression mentally.
In this activity, students are given cards that contain illustrations, definitions, and descriptions of points, lines, rays, and segments. They sort the cards into groups so that each group describes one of the four geometric figures.
When students sort the cards, they begin to connect the terms to their formal definitions and attributes (MP6).
Students may have trouble making sense of a point having “no size.” It is not necessary to discuss this in depth at this point, but during the Activity Synthesis, clarify that a point marks a location, and we need a symbol or a mark to represent it. The symbol or the mark has size, but the location itself doesn’t. It is important that students recognize that points make up lines even though we do not always identify them or label them with a dot. If needed, revisit the isometric grid from the previous activity as a reference.
Your teacher will give you a set of cards.
Sort the cards into 4 groups. Each group should represent the attributes or characteristics of a point, line, ray, or line segment.
Pause for directions from your teacher before completing the graphic organizer.
The purpose of this activity is for students to use line segments and rays to draw familiar two-dimensional figures, letters, and numerals. Drawing on dot paper helps to reinforce the idea that segments have a defined endpoint on both ends. It also helps to distinguish rays from segments. As they describe and compare figures, students use vocabulary from the previous activity.
The activity also enables the teacher to hear the geometric vocabulary students are bringing from earlier grades. Consider displaying a chart with an image of each shape listed in the first problem during the Launch.
This activity uses MLR7 Compare and Connect. Advances: representing, conversing.
MLR7 Compare and Connect
Each dot on the grid represents a point. Draw line segments to create:
a triangle
a rhombus
a trapezoid
a hexagon
a pentagon
a rectangle
Draw a combination of rays and line segments to create:
an uppercase letter
a number
a lowercase letter
Refer to student examples to reference during the Activity Synthesis questions, or invite students to illustrate their explanations for each question.
“Today we learned the meanings of points, lines, line segments, and rays, and we used those geometric parts to create drawings.”
“How might we explain to a new student how lines, rays, and line segments are different?” (A line is straight and goes on forever in both directions. A line segment is a part of a line with two endpoints and all the points in between them. A ray is also a part of a line, but it has a starting point and goes on forever in one direction. We can use drawings to show how they are different.)
“Are the dots on the paper we used today the only points that could be in the shapes and figures?” (No. Each shape we drew had many points, not just the ones that were already there.)
Draw a capital A. “The sides of the letter A and the ends of the horizontal segment don’t have any dots. Can we call these parts of the ‘A’ line segments?” (Yes. There doesn’t have to be dots at the ends. They have a starting point and an endpoint. Dots are just what we use to label points.)
Draw a capital L. “Is the bottom left corner of the letter L a point? Why or why not?” (Yes. A point is a location. It doesn’t have to be marked by a dot. Any location on the line segments that make up the L are points on that letter.)