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Geometry 2016-17 ~ Unit 4 Title Suggested Time Frame 3rd Six Weeks Suggested Duration: 20 Days Guiding Questions Quadrilaterals and Coordinate Proof CISD Safety Net Standards: G.5A Big Ideas/Enduring Understandings Module 9 • Properties of quadrilaterals can be used to solve real-world problems. Module 9 • What can you conclude about the sides, angles, and diagonals of a parallelogram? • What criteria can you use to prove that a quadrilateral is a parallelogram? • What are the properties of rectangles, rhombuses, and squares? • How can you use given conditions to show that a quadrilateral is a rectangle, a rhombus, or a square? • What are the properties of kites and trapezoids? Module 10 • Using slope and distance coordinate proofs can be used to solve real world problems. Module 10 • How can you use slope to solve problems involving parallel lines? • How can you use slope to solve problems involving perpendicular lines? • How do you write a coordinate proof? • How can you use slope and the distance formula in coordinate proofs? • How do you find the perimeter and area of polygons in the coordinate plane? Vertical Alignment Expectations TEA Vertical Alignment Chart Grades 5-8, Geometry Geometry ~ Unit 4 Updated October 17, 2016 Page 1 of 10 Sample Assessment Question Geometry 2016-17 ~ Unit 4 Coming Soon.... The resources included here provide teaching examples and/or meaningful learning experiences to address the District Curriculum. In order to address the TEKS to the proper depth and complexity, teachers are encouraged to use resources to the degree that they are congruent with the TEKS and research-based best practices. Teaching using only the suggested resources does not guarantee student mastery of all standards. Teachers must use professional judgment to select among these and/or other resources to teach the district curriculum. Some resources are protected by copyright. A username and password is required to view the copyrighted material. A portion of the District Specificity statements and graphics are a product of the Austin Area Math Supervisors TEKS Clarifying Documents. Ongoing TEKS Math Processing Skills G.1 Mathematical process standards. The student uses mathematical processes to acquire and demonstrate mathematical understanding. The student is expected to: • (A) apply mathematics to problems arising in everyday life, society, and the workplace; (B) use a problem-solving model that incorporates analyzing given information, formulating a plan or strategy, determining a solution, justifying the solution, and evaluating the problem-solving process and the reasonableness of the solution; • (C) select tools, including real objects, manipulatives, paper and pencil, and technology as appropriate, and techniques, including mental math, estimation, and number sense as appropriate, to solve problems; Focus is on application Students should assess which tool to apply rather than trying only one or all (D) communicate mathematical ideas, reasoning, and their implications using multiple representations, including symbols, diagrams, graphs, and language as appropriate; Geometry ~ Unit 4 Updated October 17, 2016 Page 2 of 10 Geometry 2016-17 ~ Unit 4 (E) create and use representations to organize, record, and communicate mathematical ideas; • (F) analyze mathematical relationships to connect and communicate mathematical ideas; and • Students are expected to form conjectures based on patterns or sets of examples and non-examples (G) display, explain, and justify mathematical ideas and arguments using precise mathematical language in written or oral communication • Precise mathematical language is expected. Knowledge and Skills with Student Expectations • District Specificity/ Examples G.2 Coordinate and Transformational Geometry. The student uses the process skills to understand the connections between algebra and geometry and uses the one- and two-dimensional coordinate systems to verify geometric conjectures. G.2B (B) The student is expected 1. Students need to be shown how to take the Pythagorean Theorem and derive the distance formula. Students should be able to apply the formula to solve for missing lengths and then using that information to determine relationships (including determining congruence of segments). Teachers need to explain the importance of substituting in consistent order in the formula. to derive and use the distance, slope, and midpoint formulas to verify geometric relationships, including congruence of segments and parallelism or Geometry ~ Unit 4 Updated October 17, 2016 Students should evaluate the effectiveness of representations to ensure they are communicating mathematical ideas clearly Students are expected to use appropriate mathematical vocabulary and phrasing when communicating ideas Prior Knowledge: Students have found distance on the coordinate grid using the Pythagorean theorem in 8th grade. Students have a concept of slope from Algebra I. Students will have seen the average (mean) since 6th grade, which is used to find the midpoint. The coordinate grid can be used to derive all the formulas. Vocabulary • • • • • • • • Congruent Distance formula Lines Midpoint Formula Parallel Perpendicular Segments Slope Formula Suggested Resources Resources listed and categorized to indicate suggested uses. Any additional resources must be aligned with the TEKS. Textbook Resources HMH Geometry Unit 3 Web Resources Regents Prep Exam Center NSA.Gov Activities and Lessons Region XI Livebinder NCTM Illuminations Khan Academy Page 3 of 10 perpendicularity of pairs of lines; and 2. Teachers should review the concept of slope (change in y’s over change in x’s), how to find slope, parallel and perpendicular slopes in order to prove parallelism and perpendicularism in quadrilaterals. (NOTE: It should be emphasized perpendicular is opposite reciprocal vs. negative reciprocal. It should also be emphasized parallel lines or segments have the same slope.) Geometry 2016-17 ~ Unit 4 Given a geometric figure on a grid, students should be able to identify the slope of each side. Once they have identified the slopes of each side, students should be able to determine if there are any parallel or perpendicular sides. 3. Teachers should explain the connection of the midpoint formula to finding an average. Students should be able to use the midpoint formula. (NOTE: A problem could give the midpoint and the coordinates of one endpoint, and then ask students to find the coordinates of the other endpoint.) Once students have found the midpoint, they are able to verify medians, midsegments, and perpendicular bisectors. Example Problem (Covers all parts of TEK) 1. Students plot four points on a grid to create a quadrilateral. Students would need to use the distance formula to find side lengths and find the slope of each side to prove it is or is not a square. Use the midpoint and slope formulas to find the intersection point and slopes of the diagonals within the square to reinforce properties of a square (perpendicular bisectors). 2. Proving the triangle midsegment theorem and concurrency of medians theorem. Geometry ~ Unit 4 Updated October 17, 2016 Page 4 of 10 G.5 Logical Argument and Constructions. The student uses constructions to validate conjectures about geometric figures. *CISD Safety Net* (A) The student is expected to investigate patterns to make conjectures about geometric relationships, including angles formed by parallel lines cut by a transversal, criteria required for triangle congruence, special segments of triangles, diagonals of quadrilaterals, interior and exterior angles of polygons, and special segments and angles of circles choosing from a variety of tools. G.5A Teachers should: Show • the relationships of parallel lines cut by a transversal & patterns it creates • how patterns lead to theorems Students should: • Investigate patterns to make conjectures about geometric relationships including diagonals of quadrilaterals (parallelograms, rectangles, rhombi, squares, kites, and trapezoids) • Discover theorems based on investigation type activities Misconceptions: • Angle relationships exist with any two lines at transversal. • Students must understand that lines cut by a transversal must be parallel for the angles relationships to exist. • Students struggle to identify congruent angles based off of previous properties. Geometry ~ Unit 4 Updated October 17, 2016 • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Geometry 2016-17 ~ Unit 4 acute triangle adjacent triangles alternate exterior angles alternate interior angles altitude angle angle bisector central angle chord circle congruent corresponding angles diagonal exterior angle interior angle linear pair major arc median midsegment of a triangle minor arc obtuse triangle parallel lines perpendicular bisector polygon quadrilateral right triangle same side interior angles secant segment Math is Fun - Quadrilaterals NSA.GOV Activities Page 5 of 10 Examples: • • • • • • • Geometry 2016-17 ~ Unit 4 supplementary tangent transversal triangle triangle congruence (SSS, SAS, AAS, HL) vertex vertical angles Angles 8 and 4 are Alternate exterior angles that are NOT congruent. VS. Angles 1 and 2 are Alternate exterior angles that ARE congruent BECAUSE the two lines are parallel. (1) Prove opposite sides are congruent in a parallelogram. (2) Prove diagonals bisect each other in parallelograms. (3) Prove conditions for rectangles, rhombi, and squares. (4) Prove base angles of isosceles triangles are congruent. Geometry ~ Unit 4 Updated October 17, 2016 Page 6 of 10 G.6 Proof and Congruence. The student uses the process skills with deductive reasoning to prove and apply theorems by utilizing a variety of methods such as coordinate, transformational, axiomatic and formats such as two-column, paragraph, flow chart. (E) The students is expected to prove a quadrilateral is a parallelogram, rectangle, square or rhombus using opposite sides, opposite angles, or diagonals and apply these relationships to solve problems. G.6E Big Idea - prove what type of quadrilateral (with coordinate proofs) and apply to solve problems Parallelogram – quad with two pair of parallel sides • Opposite sides are parallel • Opposite sides are congruent • Opposite angles are congruent • Consecutive angles are supplementary • Diagonals of a parallelogram bisect each other Geometry 2016-17 ~ Unit 4 Regents Prep - Parallelograms • • • • • • • • Diagonals Opposite angles Opposite Sides Parallelogram Quadrilateral Rectangle Rhombus Square Parallelogram Proofs Resource Properties of Parallelogram Activity Unique Characteristics • Rectangle – parallelogram with four right angles o Diagonals of a rectangle are congruent • Rhombus – parallelogram with four congruent sides o Diagonals of a rhombus are perpendicular to each other and angle bisectors • Square – parallelogram with four right angles and four congruent sides o Diagonals are angle bisectors Teachers should show: • Explain the characteristics • Proving congruent sides • Finding angle measurements Students need to: • Solve for all missing parts of the figure • Find side measurements using distance formula • Find slope of each side & diagonals to identify perpendicular angles & parallel sides • Find diagonal length Identify the figure given based on key attributes Geometry ~ Unit 4 Updated October 17, 2016 Page 7 of 10 Geometry 2016-17 ~ Unit 4 Misconceptions: Students will try to classify the figure as only one of the different options versus recognizing the overlap. For example, a rhombus is a square, rectangle and parallelogram. Students many times think parallelograms have a line of symmetry and therefore try to mark angles congruent that are not congruent. Examples 1. In the parallelogram below, PG = 2x – 7, MR = x + 5, and MG = 2x – 5. Find the value of x, PG, MR, and MG. 2. Draw figure ABCD using the following ordered pairs: A(0, 0), B(5, 5), C(6, 12), and D(1, 7). Complete the table below. How do you know this is a rectangle versus a square? Geometry ~ Unit 4 Updated October 17, 2016 Page 8 of 10 G.11 Two-dimensional and three-dimensional figures. The student uses the process skills in the application of formulas to determine measures of two- and threedimensional figures. (B) The student is expected to determine the area of composite two-dimensional figures comprised of a combination of triangles, parallelograms, trapezoids, kites, regular polygons, or sectors of circles to solve problems using appropriate units of measure. Geometry 2016-17 ~ Unit 4 G.11B Big Idea - How to find the area of two-dimensional composite figures by separating or joining shapes or parts of shapes Student should be able to: • Find area of composite figures (including any combination of triangles, parallelograms, rectangles, rhombi, trapezoids, and kites) • Label units of measure • • • • • • • • • area circle composite twodimensional figures kite parallelogram regular polygon sector trapezoid triangle Kahn Academy Area and Perimeter Resources Area of Composite Shapes Activity Resource Teachers should show: • How to break a composite figure into smaller shapes in order to solve. • When to subtract the areas versus add the areas Examples: Geometry ~ Unit 4 Updated October 17, 2016 Page 9 of 10 Geometry 2016-17 ~ Unit 4 Additionally, see Example 3 on page 606 in the textbook. Misconceptions: • Find the area of the shaded region - when you add or when you subtract. • Students using the correct units of measure. Geometry ~ Unit 4 Updated October 17, 2016 Page 10 of 10