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This Number Talk encourages students to use their understanding of mixed numbers and properties of operations to mentally solve problems. The strategies elicited here will be helpful as students develop their fluency in performing operations on fractions.
Find the value of each expression mentally.
The purpose of this activity is for students to describe and sort triangles based on the length of their sides and the size of their angles. Students are asked to find all the triangles (from the same set of cards used in the previous lesson) that have specific attributes. When students choose rulers, square corners, or protractors to identify and compare attributes of triangles, they use appropriate tools strategically (MP5).
Along the way, students notice attributes that all triangles seem to share (for instance, having three angles and at least two acute angles), attributes that some triangles share (for instance, having two equal angles or two equal sides), and those that no triangles seem to have (for example, parallel sides or multiple obtuse angles). With these repeated observations, students deepen their understanding of the properties of triangles and their sub-groups (MP8).
In the Activity Synthesis, students are introduced to right triangles.
Choose 1 sentence to complete based on your work.
In this activity, students identify right triangles. They also explain why certain given shapes are not right triangles. As they determine whether a triangle is a right triangle, students may use the corner of an index card or a piece of paper, use a protractor, or trace an angle in a triangle to compare it with an angle that they know to be a right angle. In doing so, students practice choosing tools strategically (MP5).
Identify all shapes that are right triangles. For each right triangle, mark the right angle with a small square.
“Today we analyzed and identified triangles with different attributes.“
“If we classify or group triangles based on side length, what types might we see?” (Triangles with all the same length, all different lengths, or two sides with the same length)
“How can we tell if sides were the same length?” (Use a ruler or patty paper to measure, fold the paper to see if the sides match up perfectly)
“If we classify or group triangles based on angle, what types might we see?” (Triangles with all acute angles, only one obtuse angle, or one right angle)
“Earlier we identified some right triangles. Which of these statements do you think defines a right triangle: ‘a triangle with one right angle’ or ‘a triangle with one pair of perpendicular sides’?” (Both are accurate. Perpendicular sides make a right angle.)
“Take 1–2 minutes to add any new words from today's lesson to your word walls.”
Tell students that, in the next lesson, they will explore some of the same attributes in quadrilaterals.