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High School Geometry Common Core Resources

Here you will find all high school geometry resources to guide and support mathematics teaching and learning.

These resources are organized by mathematical strand and refer to specific Common Core math content standards.

Quick reference: What are these tools?

Inside Problem Solving      Cut It Out (G-CO.B.6)      Polly Gone (G-CO.B.7)      The Shape of Things (G-CO.C.10, G-CO.C.11)

Inside Problem Solving      First Rate (G-SRT.C.8)      Measuring Mammals (G-SRT.B.5)      Piece it Together (G.SRT.C.8)      The Shape of Things (G-SRT.B.5)

Inside Problem Solving      Once Upon A Time (G-C.A.2)      The Shape of Things (G-C.A.2)      What’s Your Angle (G-C.A.2)

Inside Problem Solving      Piece it Together (G.GMD.A.1)

Inside Problem Solving      Growing Staircases (G-MG.1)      Miles of Tiles (G-MG.A.3)      Polly Gone (G-MG.A.3)      The Shape of Things (G-MG.A.1)      What’s Your Angle (G-MG.A.3)  

Inside Problem Solving      Polly Gone (G-GPE.B.7, G-GPE.B.4)

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Common Core Geometry Unit 3 Lesson 5 Proofs with Partitioning

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New York State Common Core Math Geometry, Module 1, Lesson 13

Worksheets for Geometry

Student Outcomes

  • Students manipulate rotations by each parameter—center of rotation, angle of rotation, and a point under the rotation.

Exploratory Challenge

You need a pair of scissors and a ruler.

Cut out the 75° angle on the right and use it as a guide to rotate the figure below 75° counterclockwise around the given center of rotation (Point 𝑃).

  • Place the vertex of the 75° angle at point 𝑃.
  • Line up one ray of the 75° angle with vertex 𝐴 on the figure. Carefully measure the length from point 𝑃 to vertex 𝐴.
  • Measure that same distance along the other ray of the reference angle, and mark the location of your new point, 𝐴′.
  • Repeat these steps for each vertex of the figure, labeling the new vertices as you find them.
  • Connect the six segments that form the sides of your rotated image.

In Grade 8, we spent time developing an understanding of what happens in the application of a rotation by participating in hands-on lessons. Now, we can define rotation precisely. First, we need to talk about the direction of the rotation. If you stand up and spin in place, you can either spin to your left or spin to your right. This spinning to your left or right can be rephrased using what we know about analog clocks: spinning to your left is spinning in a counterclockwise direction, and spinning to your right is spinning in a clockwise direction. We need to have the same sort of notion for rotating figures in the plane. It turns out that there is a way to always choose a counterclockwise half-plane for any ray: The counterclockwise half-plane of 𝐶𝑃 is the half-plane of 𝐶𝑃 that lies to the left as you move along 𝐶𝑃 in the direction from 𝐶 to 𝑃. (The clockwise half-plane is then the half-plane that lies to the right as you move along 𝐶𝑃 in the direction from 𝐶 to 𝑃.) We use this idea to state the definition of rotation.

For 0° < 𝜃° < 180°, the rotation of 𝜃 degrees around the center 𝐶 is the transformation 𝑅𝐶,𝜃 of the plane defined as follows:

  • For the center point 𝐶, 𝑅𝐶,𝜃 (𝐶) = 𝐶, and
  • For any other point 𝑃, 𝑅𝐶,𝜃 (𝑃) is the point 𝑄 that lies in the counterclockwise half-plane of 𝐶𝑃 , such that 𝐶𝑄 = 𝐶𝑃 and 𝑚∠𝑃𝐶𝑄 = 𝜃°.

A rotation of 0 degrees around the center 𝐶 is the identity transformation (i.e., for all points 𝐴 in the plane, it is the rotation defined by the equation 𝑅𝐶,0(𝐴) = 𝐴).

A rotation of 180° around the center 𝐶 is the composition of two rotations of 90° around the center 𝐶. It is also the transformation that maps every point 𝑃 (other than 𝐶) to the other endpoint of the diameter of a circle with center 𝐶 and radius 𝐶𝑃.

  • A rotation leaves the center point 𝐶 fixed. 𝑅𝐶,𝜃 (𝐶) = 𝐶 states exactly that. The rotation function 𝑅 with center point 𝐶 that moves everything else in the plane 𝜃°, leaves only the center point itself unmoved.
  • Any other point 𝑃 in the plane moves the exact same degree arc along the circle defined by the center of rotation and the angle 𝜃°.
  • Then 𝑅𝐶,𝜃 (𝑃) is the point 𝑄 that lies in the counterclockwise half-plane of ray ⃗𝐶𝑃⃗⃗⃗⃗ such that 𝐶𝑄 = 𝐶𝑃 and such that 𝑚∠𝑃𝐶𝑄 = 𝜃°. Visually, you can imagine rotating the point 𝑃 in a counterclockwise arc around a circle with center 𝐶 and radius 𝐶𝑃 to find the point 𝑄.
  • All positive angle measures 𝜃 assume a counterclockwise motion; if citing a clockwise rotation, the answer should be labeled with CW. A composition of two rotations applied to a point is the image obtained by applying the second rotation to the image of the first rotation of the point. In mathematical notation, the image of a point 𝐴 after a composition of two rotations of 90° around the center 𝐶 can be described by the point 𝑅 𝐶,90 (𝑅 𝐶,90 (𝐴)). The notation reads, “Apply 𝑅 𝐶,90 to the point 𝑅 𝐶,90 (𝐴).” So, we lose nothing by defining 𝑅 𝐶,180 (𝐴) to be that image. Then, 𝑅 𝐶,180 (𝐴) = 𝑅 𝐶,90 (𝑅 𝐶,90 (𝐴)) for all points 𝐴 in the plane.

In fact, we can generalize this idea to define a rotation by any positive degree: For 𝜃° > 180°, a rotation of 𝜃° around the center 𝐶 is any composition of three or more rotations, such that each rotation is less than or equal to a 90° rotation and whose angle measures sum to 𝜃°. For example, a rotation of 240° is equal to the composition of three rotations by 80° about the same center, the composition of five rotations by 50°, 50°, 50°, 50°, and 40° about the same center, or the composition of 240 rotations by 1° about the same center.

Notice that we have been assuming that all rotations rotate in the counterclockwise direction. However, the inverse rotation (the rotation that undoes a given rotation) can be thought of as rotating in the clockwise direction. For example, rotate a point 𝐴 by 30° around another point 𝐶 to get the image 𝑅 𝐶,30 (𝐴). We can undo that rotation by rotating by 30° in the clockwise direction around the same center 𝐶. Fortunately, we have an easy way to describe a rotation in the clockwise direction. If all positive degree rotations are in the counterclockwise direction, then we can define a negative degree rotation as a rotation in the clockwise direction (using the clockwise half-plane instead of the counterclockwise half-plane). Thus, 𝑅 𝐶,-30 is a 30° rotation in the clockwise direction around the center 𝐶. Since a composition of two rotations around the same center is just the sum of the degrees of each rotation, we see that

𝑅 𝐶,-30 (𝑅 𝐶,30 (𝐴)) = 𝑅 𝐶,0 (𝐴) = 𝐴,

for all points 𝐴 in the plane. Thus, we have defined how to perform a rotation for any number of degrees—positive or negative.

As this is our first foray into close work with rigid motions, we emphasize an important fact about rotations. Rotations are one kind of rigid motion or transformation of the plane (a function that assigns to each point 𝑃 of the plane a unique point 𝐹(𝑃)) that preserves lengths of segments and measures of angles. Recall that Grade 8 investigations involved manipulatives that modeled rigid motions (e.g., transparencies) because you could actually see that a figure was not altered, as far as length or angle was concerned. It is important to hold onto this idea while studying all of the rigid motions.

Constructing rotations precisely can be challenging. Fortunately, computer software is readily available to help you create transformations easily. Geometry software (such as Geogebra) allows you to create plane figures and rotate them a given number of degrees around a specified center of rotation. The figures in the exercises were rotated using Geogebra. Determine the angle and direction of rotation that carries each pre-image onto its (dashed-line) image. Assume both angles of rotation are positive. The center of rotation for Exercise 1 is point 𝐷 and for Figure 2 is point 𝐸.

Exercises 1–3

  • To determine the angle of rotation, you measure the angle formed by connecting corresponding vertices to the center point of rotation. In Exercise 1, measure ∠𝐴𝐷′𝐴′. What happened to ∠𝐷? Can you see that 𝐷 is the center of rotation, therefore, mapping 𝐷′ onto itself? Before leaving Exercise 1, try drawing ∠𝐵𝐷′𝐵′. Do you get the same angle measure? What about ∠𝐶𝐷′𝐶′? Try finding the angle and direction of rotation for Exercise 2 on your own.
  • Did you draw ∠𝐷𝐸𝐷′ or ∠𝐶𝐸𝐶′? Now that you can find the angle of rotation, let’s move on to finding the center of rotation. Follow the directions below to locate the center of rotation, taking the figure at the top right to its image at the bottom left
  • a. Draw a segment connecting points 𝐴 and 𝐴′. b. Using a compass and straightedge, find the perpendicular bisector of this segment. c. Draw a segment connecting points 𝐵 and 𝐵′. d. Find the perpendicular bisector of this segment. e. The point of intersection of the two perpendicular bisectors is the center of rotation. Label this point 𝑃. Justify your construction by measuring ∠𝐴𝑃𝐴′ and ∠𝐵𝑃𝐵′. Did you obtain the same measure?

Exercises 4–5 Find the centers of rotation and angles of rotation for Exercises 4 and 5.

Lesson Summary

  • A rotation carries segments onto segments of equal length.
  • A rotation carries angles onto angles of equal measure.

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Notice that this objective is now ONLY referring to the congruence of triangles. We are about to study triangles and their properties. This objective is establishing that if two triangles are congruent then they can be mapped onto each other using a sequence of isometric transformations and that their corresponding angles and sides are congruent.

 

   

   

 

SKILLS

The student will be able to identify corresponding angles and sides based on congruence statements.

 

The student will be able to develop and write congruence statements for two congruent triangles.

 

The student will be able to determine if two triangles are congruent based on their corresponding parts.

 

 

THE BIG IDEA

Congruence - Most all new relationships proven or established from this point forward come from establishing triangles are congruent and that congruent triangles have many congruent parts and pieces.

TRAPS & PITFALLS

No real traps or pitfalls here - not if you have introduced the previous concepts correctly.

PAST CONNECTIONS

Students will use the concepts covered in G.CO.4 and G.CO.5. The definitions and the composite transformations will link isometry to congruence.

FUTURE CONNECTIONS

This is the developing of the connection to congruence. The next few objectives will rely heavily on this definition of congruence.

MY REFLECTIONS (over line l )

This seems to come quite easily. I think this is one of the reasons why we introduce congruence this way. It makes sense that if one is identical to the other (or can be mapped onto the other) that they would have to be congruent. In many ways this was a quick objective because it was an easy stepping stone to bigger ideas.

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Question: Date: TRIANGLE CONGRUENCE THEOREMS COMMON CORE GEOMETRY HOMEWORK REASONING 1. Which picture below that does not contain enough information to prove that MBC ADEF? (3) D (4) 2. In the following diagram, we know that AD BC and 21a 22. Which of the three theorems (ASA. SAS. or SSS) would be used to justify that ABC = ACDA? Explain your choice. 3. An additional

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Unit 2 – Transformations, Rigid Motions, and Congruence

Transformations

LESSON/HOMEWORK

LESSON VIDEO

EDITABLE LESSON

EDITABLE KEY

Reflections

Isosceles Triangles

Translations

Congruence and Rigid Motions

Basic Rigid Motion Proofs

Congruence Reasoning with Triangles

Symmetries of a Figure

Unit Review

Unit 2 Review – Transformations, Rigid Motions, and Congruence

UNIT REVIEW

EDITABLE REVIEW

Unit 2 Assessment Form A

EDITABLE ASSESSMENT

Unit 2 Assessment Form B

Unit 2 Assessment Form C

Unit 2 Assessment Form D

Unit 2 Exit Tickets

Unit 2 Mid-Unit Quiz (After Lesson #5) – Form A

Unit 2 Mid-Unit Quiz (After Lesson #5) – Form B

Unit 2 Mid-Unit Quiz (After Lesson #5) – Form C

Unit 2 Mid-Unit Quiz (After Lesson #5) – Form D

U02.AO.01 – 2 Kites (Enrichment)

EDITABLE RESOURCE

U02.AO.02 – Congruence and Rigid Motion Practice

U02.AO.03 – Isosceles Triangles – Extra Practice

U02.AO.04 – Polygon Symmetry and Mapping – Extra Practice

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