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This Warm-up prompts students to compare four angles. When making comparisons, students have a reason to use language precisely (MP6). The activity also gives the teacher an opportunity to hear how students use terminology to talk about the characteristics of the angles in comparison to one another. This language will be important as students sort and order angles in the lesson activities. During the discussion, ask students to explain the meanings of any terms they use, such as “angle,” “ray,” “point,” “smaller,” “larger,” “flat,” “upside-down,” and so on.
Which 3 go together?
Card Sort Angles Cards
Previously, students learned that angles are geometric figures made up of two rays that share the same starting point. The purpose of this activity is for students to compare angles, using the language that makes sense to them. As students look for ways to sort the cards into different categories, they have a reason to look for and describe the parts of the angles that make them different (MP7).
MLR2 Collect and Display is used during the Activity Synthesis of the lesson to record and organize the language students use to describe parts of angles and their sizes. Encourage students to notice differences in the ways they attempt to compare the angles. This work helps elicit the need for more precise vocabulary to describe angle size and ways to measure angles.
This activity uses MLR2 Collect and Display. Advances: conversing, reading, writing.
Your teacher will give you a set of cards that show angles.
Sort the angles into 3 or more categories in a way that makes sense to you.
Record your sorted angles here. Write words or phrases to describe each category. Be ready to explain the meaning of your categories.
Previously, students sorted angles in ways that made sense to them. In this activity, students reason about how to compare angles, based on a measurable attribute. They are asked to sort the angles from smallest to largest. Students may interpret this prompt in many ways, but all students must begin to reason about how to describe the size of an angle. As students discuss and justify their decisions, they share a mathematical claim and the thinking behind it (MP3).
Accept any way that students compare the angles as long as they can explain how they determine whether an angle is smaller or larger than another. Students may use informal language to describe the sizes of the angles. For example, they may use “less wide,” “more pointy,” or “less space” to describe smaller angles. They also may reason that an angle that “can fit inside” another angle is smaller. Continue to collect student language during the activity and to offer formal language when appropriate.
You will need Cards A–P from an earlier activity.
Order the angles on the cards from smallest to largest.
Record your ordered angles. Explain or show how you decided which angle was the smallest and which was the largest.
“Today we compared different angles. We sorted them in different ways and ordered them, based on their sizes. We saw that we can describe angles and interpret their sizes in many different ways.”
Display the chart with the collection of words that students have used to describe angles.
“What questions do you have about describing and comparing angles? What do you need to know more about to describe and compare the sizes of angles?” (How do we measure angles? Can we use a ruler? What do we measure? Do we use inches or something else?)
Record students’ responses.
“In the next lessons, we’ll learn more about angle measurement and answer some of these questions.”