GLEs: 1, 4, 5, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 20, 21, 22, 24, 25, 27, 28, 29, 30, 39, 40, 41 |
|
Students will know…· Similarity (when two objects are identical except for proportional differences in lengths and areas.) · Enlargement (a copy of a given figure that is proportionately larger) · Image (the resulting figure when a given figure is enlarged /stretched or shrunk) · Correspondence (given a figure and an image of it, knowing which segments or vertices in the original figure correspond to segments or vertices in the image) · Transformation (changing a figure in a consistent way) · Transformation rule (defines how a figure is to be transformed, often given in (x,y) coordinate form) · Scale factor (number multiplied by the dimensions of the original figure to transform it into an image similar to the original figure) · Reptiles (figures made with copies of a given figure) · Map scales (linear scales given on maps that can be used to find distances and areas) · Similar triangles (triangles which have congruent corresponding angles) · Ratio (comparison of two quantities that gives the scale factor between them) |
Students will be able to…· Enlarge and shrink plane figures (with rubber-band stretcher and scale factors) · Subdivide figures (to determine scale factors) · Use scale maps, diagrams, and figures (use scale factors to find actual distances/areas with scale maps, diagrams, and similar figures) · Solve problems using properties of similar triangles · Compute applications of similarity · Identify and draw angles, circles, diameters, radii, attitudes and two-dimensional figures with given specifications, including their reflections and translations on a coordinate grid · Locate and plot coordinates in all four quadrants (including missing vertex in a parallelogram) · Recognize and compute equivalent representations (fractions, decimals, and percents) · Compute fractions and decimals (four basic operations) · Compare, order, and convert measurements and area using common reference points (within and between US and metric systems) · Recognize that pi is the ratio between the circumference and diameter of any circle · Apply of circle attributes in real life problems (i.e. radius, diameter, circumference, and area) · Apply knowledge of triangles (measures of interior angles add up to 180°) · Model and explain how scale change in linear dimensions affects perimeter/circumference and area of a two dimensional figure |
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||