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Youngstown City Schools MATH: GEOMETRY UNIT 5A: CIRCLES WITH AND WITHOUT COORDINATES - - PART I (3 weeks) 2013-2014 Synopsis: Students will become familiar with different types of angles formed by chords, secants, and tangents and methods of finding their measures. They will also construct inscribed and circumscribed triangles and quadrilateral and discover theorems concerning these polygons. Towards the end of this unit, students for the first time, will be exposed to radian measure when referring to angles and will work with arc measure and area of a sector with angles in terms of degrees as well as radians. STANDARDS G.C.1 Prove that all circles are similar. G.C.2 Identify and describe relationships among inscribed angles, radii, and chords. Include the relationship between central, inscribed, and circumscribed angles; inscribed angles on a diameter are right angles; the radius of a circle is perpendicular to the tangent where the radius intersects the circle. G.C.3 Construct the inscribed and circumscribed circles of a triangle, and prove properties of angles for a quadrilateral inscribed in a circle. G.C.4 (+) Construct a tangent line from a point outside a given circle to the circle. G.C.5 Derive using similarity the fact that the length of the arc intercepted by an angle is proportional to the radius, and define the radian measure of the angle as the constant of proportionality; derive the formula for the area of a sector. G.MG.1 Use geometric shapes, their measures, and their properties to describe objects (e.g., modeling a tree trunk or a human torso as a cylinder).* MATH PRACTICES 1. Make sense of problems and persevere in solving them. 2. Reason abstractly and quantitatively. 3. Construct viable arguments and critique the reasoning of others. 4. Model with mathematics. 5. Use appropriate tools strategically. 6. Attend to precision. 7. Look for and make use of structure. 8. Look for and express regularity in repeated reasoning LITERACY STANDARDS L.1 Learn to read mathematical text (including textbooks, articles, problems, problem explanations) L.2 Communicate using correct mathematical terminology L.4 Listen to and critique peer explanations of reasoning L.5 Justify orally and in writing mathematical reasoning L.7 Research mathematics topics or related problems The following web sites may be helpful in this unit: http://www.geogebra.org/en/upload/files/english/Guy/Circles_and_angles/Angles_Circles_Lesson.pdf deals with different angles – shows proofs – student discovery worksheets. http://www.mathsisfun.com/geometry/circle-theorems.html theorems about angles MOTIVATION TEACHER NOTES 1. Students work on star polygon activities using Circular Geoboards star polygons, or the link: 6/30/2013 YCS Geometry: Unit 5A: Circles With and Without Coordinates Part I 2013-2014 1 MOTIVATION TEACHER NOTES http://starpolygons.com/ (When using the link make number of points 12, connect every 5 points, inradius 0, drawing mode-framework, display mode - - line, inner stars - - increment connecting points.). Copy attached to unit on page 6. Students can make their own designs by using the circular Geoboard paper on page 558 in your text resource packet, or using the links: https://mathaction.wikispaces.com/file/view/Circular+Geoboard+Paper.doc/32622829/Circular%20GeoboardPaper.doc http://www.mathedpage.org/angles/paper-circles.html 2. Preview expectations for end of Unit 3. Have students set both personal and academic goals for this Unit or grading period. TEACHING-LEARNING Vocabulary Central Angles Secant Intercepted Arc Inscribed Circumcenter Radian TEACHER NOTES Inscribed Angles Tangent Minor Arc Circumscribed Orthocenter Sector Semicircle Chord Major Arc Incenter Centroid 1. To introduce students to circles go to geometry sketchpad or an equivalent software, create several circles, show a translation (moving smaller circle on top of the other) and dilation (enlarging the smaller circle to be exactly like the larger circle) to illustrate similarity. Have students state a theorem that is illustrated by this and then prove it. To verify their proof, present the formal proof on the link http://www.cpm.org/pdfs/state_supplements/Similar_Circles.pdf also attached to the unit on page 7-8. (G.C.1, MP.2, MP.3, MP.4, MP.5, MP.6, MP.8, L.1, L.2, L.5) 2. The Glencoe Geometry Ohio Edition 2005 edition text provides the bulk of the material for the standards in Chapter 10. (Note: There are three concepts listed below marked with a* that are not included in the textbook. There is material online and in various texts to be used to develop these. It is the teacher’s discretion as to the method of teaching, presenting proofs, working problems and/or discovery activities. A few discovery activities are listed and can be used. To illustrate many of these theorems, discovery activities can be developed with students measuring angles, chords, secants, parts of chords, parts of secants and parts of tangents with protractors and rulers and then making conclusions from these. ) Use the text, its resources and any additional resources as needed to cover the following: a) central angles, page 529-530 b) inscribed angles, page 544-551 (section 10-4). An activity to illustrate this would be to give students several drawings of a central angle and an inscribed angle intercepting the same arc. Have them measure the inscribed angle and the central angle to show the inscribed angle is half the central angle, concluding an inscribed angle is half its intercepted arc. c) special case – angle inscribed in a semicircle is a right angle page 547, use dynamic geometry to show this by moving the vertex of the angle around the semicircle showing that it is always a right angle http://www.learnalberta.ca/content/memg/Division03/Central%20Angle%20Property/index.html applet that allows movement of the inscribed angle and also movement of the radii to discover measure of an inscribed angle in relation to the arc and central angle. d) angles formed by secant and tangent intersecting on the circle, page 562 e) angles formed by two secants intersecting inside the circle, page 561-562 f) angles formed by tangent and secant, two secants or two tangents intersecting outside the circle, page 563-564 g) radius perpendicular to chord bisects it, page 537. The following discovery activity can be used with students: Give students several drawings of circles with the center marked. Have 6/30/2013 YCS Geometry: Unit 5A: Circles With and Without Coordinates Part I 2013-2014 2 TEACHING-LEARNING TEACHER NOTES them draw a chord and then a radius perpendicular to the chord using a protractor. Ask them to measure the two sections of the chord, repeat several times. Then ask them to state and explain their conclusion. h) if radius bisects a chord, it is perpendicular to it, The following discovery activity can be used with students: Give students several drawings of circles with the center marked. Have them draw a chord and bisect it, then draw a radius from the center to the midpoint of the chord. Using a protractor, ask them to measure the angle where the radius and chord meet. Repeat several times. Then ask them to state and explain their conclusion.* i) perpendicular bisector of chord passes through the center. The following discovery activity can be used with students: Give students several drawings of circles with the center marked. Have them draw a chord and then using a protractor draw the perpendicular bisector of it. Ask the students to explain the relationship between the perpendicular bisector and the circle.* j) Two central angles are congruent if and only if their intercepted arcs are congruent; page 530 k) two central angles are congruent if and only if their intercepted chords are congruent; page 530 l) two arcs are congruent if and only if their intercepted chords are congruent; page 536 m) Two chords intersecting inside a circle – the product of the segments of one chord equal the product of the segments of the other chord. Page 569 n) A radius is perpendicular to a line at its outer endpoint if and only if it is tangent to the circle at the point of intersection. Page 553 o) Two tangents drawn from an outside point are congruent. At this time have students construct a tangent line from a point outside a circle to the circle. Have them construct another tangent through the same outside point, measure the two tangents and arrive at a conclusion. From that formulate the theorem: Two tangents from an outside point are congruent. Construction on page 554 and problems on page 555- 557 p) The sum of the measures of a tangent-tangent angle and its minor arc is 180° q) If a tangent and secant intersect, then the square of the tangent segment equals the product of the outside part of the secant times the whole secant, page 571 r) If two secants intersect outside a circle, then the product of the outside part times the whole secant of one equals the product of the outside part times the whole secant of the other. Page 570 (G.C.2, G.MG.1, G.C.4, MP.1, MP.2, MP.3, MP.4, MP.5, MP.6, MP.7, MP.8, L.1, L.2, L.4, L.5) 3. After discussing angles, radii, chords, tangents and secants, take a break and work on inscribed and circumscribed triangle constructions found on pages 559-560. Prior to the constructions, have students research the terms: incenter, circumcenter, orthocenter, and centroid; discuss them as a class and formulate their own definitions. (G.C.3, MP.4, MP.5, MP.6, MP.7, L.1, L.2, L.4, L.7) 4. Have students construct a quadrilateral inscribed in a circle, measure angles and form a conjecture. Have students discuss their findings and critique. (Opposite angles are supplementary). Then have students draw a parallelogram inscribed in a circle and make a conjecture about the parallelogram. (It is a rectangle). Work on problems on pages 548-550. (G.C.3, MP.1, MP.2, MP.3, MP.4, MP.5, MP.6, L.2, L.4, L.5) The following link may be helpful: http://www.math.uakron.edu/amc/Geometry/HS_MSGeometryLessons/6.3inscribedquadsandllogram.pdf 5. Students have been working with degrees and it is now time to introduce them to radians. A central angle whose measure is one radian is one that is formed by subtending an arc whose measure is equal to the radius of the circle. Since all circles are similar, it can be shown that the central angles whose measure is equal to one radian are similar in circles of different radii. An activity that helps students understand this is to have them cut out sectors of circles with varying radii whose arc length is equal to the radius and conclude that the angles are the same size or use 6/30/2013 YCS Geometry: Unit 5A: Circles With and Without Coordinates Part I 2013-2014 3 TEACHING-LEARNING TEACHER NOTES concentric circles and mark off central angles whose arc length is equal to the radii. Once students understand the meaning of a radian then proceed to discuss the relationship between radians and degrees starting with 2πr = 3600 which leads to πr = 1800, dividing both sides by π gives 1 radian = or dividing by 180 gives . Discuss when dividing the circle into 4ths, 6ths, 8ths, 12ths, what is the measure of the central angles formed in radians. Practice changing degrees to radians and radians to degrees. Worksheet is attached on page 9-10. (G.C.5, MP.2, MP.4, MP.5, MP.6, MP.7, L.2) The following link may be helpful: http://learni.st/users/S33572/boards/3056-arc-length-and-radians-common-core-standard-9-12-g-c-5 6. Have students arrive at an intuitive definition of arc length which is a fractional part of a circle times the circumference of a circle. From this definition the formula for arc length with central angle in degrees would be: . For radians: s = rè where s is the arc length, r is the radius, and θ is the central angle subtending the arc. Reinforce with additional problems. Worksheet is attached on page 11. (G.C.5, MP.2, MP.3, MP.4, MP.7, L.2, L.5) 7. Have students arrive at an intuitive definition of area of a sector, which is a fractional part of a circle times the area of a circle: A = for degrees and A = r2 è for radians. Reinforce with additional problems. Worksheet is attached on page 12-13. (G.C.5, MP.2, MP.3, MP.4, MP.7, L.2, L.5) The following link contains problems and explanations for T/L #5, #6 and #7. http://www.mathcentre.ac.uk/resources/uploaded/mc-ty-radians-2009-1.pdf contains problems involving radians, degrees, arc length, and area of a sector. TEACHER NOTES TEACHER CLASSROOM ASSESSMENT 1. Quizzes 2. In class participation and practice problems for each concept 3. 2- and 4-point questions TRADITIONAL ASSESSMENT TEACHER NOTES 1. Paper-pencil test with M-C questions and 2- and 4-point questions AUTHENTIC ASSESSMENT 1. Students evaluate goals for the unit. Or on a weekly basis TEACHER NOTES 2. A company has decided to use the design below as an architectural pattern on building. They would like you to assign a measure to the radius and tangent and then find the perimeter and area of the figure with your given radius and tangent. Name the circle P. To find the perimeter and area, first find the measure of <PAC, measure of <APC (show work), measure of <APB (show work). Show work for finding the perimeter and area. Create a scale drawing of your figure and label the points. (G.C.2, G.C.4, G.MG.1, MP.2, MP.4, MP.5, MP.7, L-2) A C B 6/30/2013 YCS Geometry: Unit 5A: Circles With and Without Coordinates Part I 2013-2014 4 RUBRIC ELEMENTS OF THE 0 PROJECT State radius and Did not attempt tangent length 1 2 3 State either radius or tangent length State both radius and tangent length without dimensions Angle measure correct Used correct trig function – error in calculations Used an acceptable method but made errors Made scale drawing without labels Found arc length or tangents correctly and added them Found area of sector or triangle correctly and subtracted them State both radius and tangent length with dimensions N/A Measure of <PAC Did not attempt Measure of <APC Did not attempt Measure of <APB Did not attempt Used wrong method for finding angle Scale drawing Did not attempt Drawing not to scale Perimeter of figure Did not attempt Found arc length or tangents Area of figure Did not attempt Found area of sector or triangle 6/30/2013 Angle measure incorrect Used incorrect trig function Found angle correctly Found angle correctly Made scale drawing with labels Found arc length and tangents correctly and added them Found area of sector and triangle correctly, subtracted them, doubled that result and added it to the area of the circle YCS Geometry: Unit 5A: Circles With and Without Coordinates Part I 2013-2014 5 6/30/2013 YCS Geometry: Unit 5A: Circles With and Without Coordinates Part I 2013-2014 6 6/30/2013 YCS Geometry: Unit 5A: Circles With and Without Coordinates Part I 2013-2014 7 6/30/2013 YCS Geometry: Unit 5A: Circles With and Without Coordinates Part I 2013-2014 8 T/L/ #5: Worksheet 1: Changing degrees to radians and radians to degrees Change the following to radians, leave answers in terms of π: 1. 600 2. 1800 3. 1350 4. 2700 5. 3300 6. 2250 7. 1500 8. 3150 9. 300 10. 2400 11. 3000 12. 450 Change the following to radians, leave answers in decimal form 1. 750 2. 350 3. 1400 4. 3120 5. 2560 6. 1000 7. 2700 8. 1300 9. 2000 10. 2800 11. 3000 12. 3500 Change the following to degrees: 1. 2. 3. 4. 7. 2.4r 5. 8. 0.25 r 6. 9. 1.6 r 10. 1.2 r 11. 3.4 r 12. 5.8 r 6/30/2013 YCS Geometry: Unit 5A: Circles With and Without Coordinates Part I 2013-2014 9 T/L/ #5: Worksheet 1: ANSWERS: Changing degrees to radians and radians to degrees Change the following to radians, leave answers in terms of π: Answers: 2. π 1. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. Change the following to radians, leave answers in decimal form Answers: 1. 1.309 2. 0.611 3. 2.444 4. 5.445 5. 4.468 6. 1.745 7. 4.712 8. 2.269 9. 3.491 10. 4.887 11. 5.236 12. 6.109 Change the following to degrees: Answers: 1. 60 4. 135 7. 137.5 10. 68.8 2. 150 5. 270 8. 14.3 11. 194.8 6/30/2013 3. 120 6. 330 9. 91.7 12. 332.3 YCS Geometry: Unit 5A: Circles With and Without Coordinates Part I 2013-2014 10 T/L #6: Worksheet #2: Find the length of the following arcs: 1. In a circle of radius 10″, find the length of an arc whose central angle is 750. 2. In a circle of radius 4 cm, find the length of an arc whose central angle is 1750. 3. In a circle of radius 8″, find the length of an arc whose inscribed angle is 250. 4. In a circle of radius 5′, find the length of an arc whose central angle 2.3r. 5. In a circle of radius 12 m, find the length of an arc whose central angle 1.5r. 6. In a circle of radius 25″, find the measure of the central angle if the length of an arc is 50″. _________________________________________________________________________________________________ Worksheet #2: Answers: 1. 13.1″ 4. 11.5 ′ 2. 12.2 cm 5. 18 m 6/30/2013 3. 3.5 ″ 6. 2r YCS Geometry: Unit 5A: Circles With and Without Coordinates Part I 2013-2014 11 T/L #7: Worksheet #3: Find the area of the following sectors: 1. A vegetable patch which is in the shape of a sector has a radius of 5m and an inside angle of 76⁰. Work out the area of the vegetable patch. 2. A stretched out paper fan forms a sector with a radius of 18 cm and an angle of 175⁰. Calculate the area of the stretched out fan using the formula A = x/360 × π × r². Give your answer to 1 decimal place. 3. A window wiper of length 20 inches goes through an angle of 160⁰. Work out the area of window covered by the window wiper. 4. A silver pendant is made in the form of a sector of a circle. If the radius is 3 cm, what is the angle, in radians so that the area is 6 cm? 5. Find the area of a piece of a 16″ pizza if the central angle is 1.2r. 6. A manufacturer that makes discs used to move furniture has decided that the discs should be in the shape of a sector. If the company has specified a disc of radius 15cm. and the central angle is 1.4r, find the area of the sector shaped disc. 6/30/2013 YCS Geometry: Unit 5A: Circles With and Without Coordinates Part I 2013-2014 12 Worksheet #3: Answers: 1. 16.6 m2 4. 1.3r 6/30/2013 2. 494.5 cm2 5. 153.6 sq. in. 3. 559 sq. in. 6. 157.5 sq. cm YCS Geometry: Unit 5A: Circles With and Without Coordinates Part I 2013-2014 13