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Grade 4 Unit 4.2 Measuring Angles and Using Angles to Solve Problems Vocabulary to Know: Key Content from This Unit: Students understand that an angle is formed when two rays share a common endpoint. They recognize that angles can be measured using tools and can refer to the turn around the center of a circle. The focus is for students to conceptually understand that angles are measured in degrees and a degree consists of a turn. It takes 360 turns to complete a circle. Students recognize that angles are additive. For example, 45 one-degree angles are equal to a 45-degree angle. In addition, students decompose (or divide) an angle into parts that add up to the measure of \ the original angle. They measure angles using a protractor and sketch angles of specified measures. Given a geometrical drawing like the one below, students will learn to use what they know to solve for an unknown angle measure. Solve for < TRU. < QRS is a straight angle. What came before this: In grade 2, students recognized, drew, and analyzed shapes having specified attributes. They also partitioned circles into two, three, or four equal shares. In grade 3, students compared and classified shapes by their sides and the number of angles. What comes after this: In grade 5, students will understand that attributes of two-dimensional figures also belong to all subcategories. For example, all rectangles have four right angles and squares are rectangles, so all squares have four right angles. Angle: union of two different rays sharing a common vertex Acute Angle: angle with a measure of less than 90 degrees Obtuse angle: angle with a measure greater than 90 degrees but less than 180 degrees Parallel: two lines in a plane that do not intersect Perpendicular: Two lines are perpendicular if they intersect, and any of the angles formed between the lines is a 90° angle Right angle: angle formed by perpendicular lines, measuring 90 degrees Straight angle : angle that measures 180 degrees Triangle: A triangle consists of three noncollinear points and the three line segments between them. Vertex : a point, often used to refer to the point where two lines meet, such as in an angle or the corner of a triangle Common Core Focus: Understand that an angle is formed wherever two rays share a common endpoint. Understand that a circle has 360 one-degree turns and each degree represents 1/360 of the arc of a circle. Use a protractor to measure and sketch angles in whole-number degrees. Recognize that an angle is made up of nonoverlapping parts and angle measures are additive. Recognize that as an angle turns n units, it measures n degrees 4. MD.5, 4. MD.6, 4. MD.7 Unit 4.4.2, Created Fall 2014 Spotlight on the Math Practices Reason Abstractly and Quantitatively Mathematically proficient students will recognize angle measure as additive in relation to the reference to a circle. In this unit, students will reason abstractly and quantitatively when they: Represent a problem with symbols Explain their thinking Use numbers flexibly by applying properties of operations and place value Examine the reasonableness of their answers/calculations How Can You Help? Continue to review vocabulary in this unit as there are many new terms. Practice adding to make 90, 180, 270 and 360, as well as subtracting from those numbers. This will be useful when students are solving problems. KEY MATHEMATICAL MODELS of the COMMON CORE Pattern Blocks Some Resources to Help at Home http://www.shodor.org/interactivate/activities/Angles/ - angle measurement game http://www.xpmath.com/forums/arcade.php?do=play&gameid=75#.Ug4vHVPodJN - play Space Angle to find the angle measurement https://learnzillion.com/lessons/2633-measure-full-and-half-rotations - learn how to form rays by looking at real-world situations Unit 4.4.2, Created Fall 2014