93322369.G Geometry Student
93322369.G Geometry Student
Series
Student
Geometry
My name
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First edition printed 2009 in Australia.
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ISBN 978-1-921861-09-3
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Series G – Geometry
Contents
Topic 1 – Lines and angles (pp. 1–6) Date completed
• lines_________________________________________________ / /
• classifying angles_______________________________________ / /
• measuring angles_______________________________________ / /
• quadrilaterals__________________________________________ / /
• triangles______________________________________________ / /
• circles________________________________________________ / /
• rip it up – investigate____________________________________ / /
• rotational symmetry____________________________________ / /
• transformation_________________________________________ / /
• tessellation____________________________________________ / /
• nets_________________________________________________ / /
• drawing 3D shapes______________________________________ / /
Series Authors:
• to cube or not to cube … – investigate______________________ / /
Rachel Flenley
Nicola Herringer • form an orderly queue – apply____________________________ / /
Copyright ©
Lines and angles – lines
These terms are commonly used when we work with lines and angles:
• parallel – these lines are always the same distance apart at every point, they never meet
• perpendicular – these lines intersect at right angles
• diagonal – these are lines within a shape that join a vertex (corner) to another vertex
• intersection – the place where 2 or more lines cross over each other
1 This paper folding activity relies on a thorough understanding of the terms in the box above. Try your
hand at it! You will need a thin circular piece of paper with a radius of at least 8 cm.
1 Begin with a circular piece 2 Fold the circle in half. 3 Fold A to meet B.
of paper.
A B
A C B
C B C C
7 Cut along fold lines EF and 8 Open the shape. What have you made?
DG, only to the intersection.
D
F E
G
Geometry
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G 1 1
SERIES TOPIC
Lines and angles – classifying angles
1 Complete the table and use the information to help you to classify the angles below. Use a maths
dictionary to help you work out any unknown terms.
right angles are acute angles are obtuse angles straight angles reflex angles revolution
_____ ° _____________ are __________ are exactly are greater than angles are
than 90° than 90° and _____° 180° and less exactly _____°
less than _____° than _____°
a b c
Make sure you
check which angle
you’re meant to be
measuring! The little
arc tells you here.
acute angle angle angle
d e f
2 G 1 Geometry
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SERIES TOPIC
Lines and angles – measuring angles
1 Use your protractor to measure these angles. Write the measurements next to the angles.
a b c
_____°
_____°
_____°
2 Measure the interior angles of this shape. Write the measurements next to each angle. The first one has
been done for you.
25º
3 List 5 sports or jobs where you think it would be important to consider angles. David Beckham can
probably think of at least one.
d _______________________ e _______________________
Geometry
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G 1 3
SERIES TOPIC
Lines and angles – measuring angles
4 Work with a partner on this activity. Take turns predicting where you think the missing ray of the angle
should go. Starting at the dot, rule your predictions then measure with a protractor. Mark in the actual
angle. Who was closer? Do you get more accurate with practice? Invent more of these on another piece
of paper if you have time.
6 Make a time that shows an angle between the two hands of:
a b c
24° 120°
4 G 1 Geometry
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SERIES TOPIC
Hand it over apply
Getting
ready Look at the picture of the hand. What well known angle
would you say is approximately formed by the thumb
and forefinger?
What Spread your hand out in the box below and trace around
to do
it. Estimate then measure the angles formed between
each finger. The measurements will be approximate only.
Compare your measurements with those of a partner. Are they similar?
Geometry
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G 1 5
SERIES TOPIC
It’s all in the timing investigate
Getting
ready You can work with a partner on this activity. You may like to use a clock with movable
hands or to use copies of the clock faces below.
What How many times do the hands on a clock form a right angle within a 12-hour period?
to do
Show the times on the clocks as you find them.
If you find 10 or more, you’ve made a great start. 15 or more, you’re doing very well.
More than 20, you’re indeed a Time Lord and people should bow as you pass by.
We have given you the first one to get you started.
12:16
6 G 1 Geometry
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SERIES TOPIC
2D shapes – polygons
A polygon is a 2D (flat) shape with 3 or more straight sides. The word comes from the Greek words,
poly and gonia, meaning ‘many angles’.
All polygons are closed – they have no break in their boundaries. They have no curved sides.
1 It’s time for a polygon pop quiz. Read through the questions and answer any you know.
Now for the research. You may draw the shapes, use the internet, or a maths dictionary to help you find
the answers. If you want to add some excitement, work in small teams and race against other teams.
The first correct team wins.
I have 4 equal sides and I’m a 3 sided polygon. I have I have 5 sides and 5 angles.
4 equal angles. 2 equal sides and angles. This makes me a pentagon.
I’m a I’m an My angles add to
I have 6 sides and 6 angles. I have 4 sides and 4 angles. I have 12 sides and 12 angles.
I’m a hexagon. I have 1 pair of parallel lines.
I’m a
My angle sum is I’m a
I’m a quadrilateral. Both pairs I’m a triangle with 1 axis of What does the phrase ‘angle
of opposite sides are parallel. symmetry. Draw and label me. sum’ mean?
I’m a
Geometry
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G 2 7
SERIES TOPIC
2D shapes – polygons
Irregular polygons have the same number of sides as regular polygons but their sides are
not of an equal length and their angles are not equal.
This is an irregular pentagon.
2 Here is a regular quadrilateral. It has 4 sides and 4 right angles. What do these angles add to? __________
Now draw an irregular quadrilateral. Measure and add the interior angles of the shapes. What do you notice?
3 Here is a regular pentagon. It has 5 sides of equal length and its angle sum is 540°. Draw an irregular
pentagon. Measure and add the angles. What do you notice?
4 Draw an irregular hexagon with 4 right angles. Mark the right angles. Compare your drawing with others’.
Are they the same?
If they are different, does that mean one of you is wrong?
8 G 2 Geometry
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SERIES TOPIC
2D shapes – polygons
When we study polygons, we use a range of terms to describe and distinguish their properties.
Look at this rhombus. We can list its properties:
• it is a 4 sided shape
• all sides are equal
• the opposite sides are parallel
• the opposite angles are equal
• when we draw in the diagonals, they cross each other at right angles
What does all this mean?
b When we say the sides are equal we mean they are the same length. We show equal sides by crossing
them with or =. Mark the equal lines on your rectangle: one set with and the other set with =.
c We often use the terms opposite and adjacent. Opposite means facing and adjacent means next to.
Trace one of the sides of your rectangle with a red pencil. Now trace the opposite side with a blue pencil.
Trace a line that is adjacent to the red line with green.
d When we say angles are equal we mean that they are the same size. We know all interior angles on a
rectangle are 90° (or right angles). This means both opposite and adjacent angles are equal. Mark the
right angles on your rectangle.
e Lines that are opposite are also parallel. This means they are always the same distance
apart and never meet. How many sets of parallel lines does your rectangle have? ____________
f When we talk about diagonals, we mean the lines we can draw from opposite angle to opposite angle.
We make these lines dotted to show they are not sides. Mark the diagonals on your rectangle with
2 dotted lines.
g We can measure the angles where diagonals intersect. On a rectangle, opposite angles on the diagonal
should be equal. Use a protractor to check that yours are. Mark the equal angles with or .
6 Now draw a triangle (any kind), a square or a trapezium. Mark the properties.
Geometry
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G 2 9
SERIES TOPIC
2D shapes – quadrilaterals
A quadrilateral is a kind of polygon. It is a closed, flat shape with 4 straight sides and 4 angles.
The name comes from the Latin words, quad and latus, meaning ‘4 sides’. We know that squares,
rhombuses, rectangles and trapeziums are all examples of quadrilaterals. We also know the interior
angles of quadrilaterals always add to 360°.
1 Use the clues to draw and name these mystery quadrilaterals. All the examples in the box above are
represented. You will need to use a protractor and you may also need to research the properties of
each quadrilateral.
• opposite sides are parallel and • all 4 interior angles are right
of equal length angles (90°)
2 Can a shape be a square, a parallelogram and a rhombus all at the same time? Explain your thinking:
10 G 2 Geometry
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SERIES TOPIC
2D shapes – triangles
We use letters to name the angles and then use these to refer to the lines.
This is line AB
A C
1 In the box below, draw a triangle with three 5 cm sides and three angles of 60°. Label the triangle ABC as
in the example above.
c Using a different colour, extend line AC by 2 cm and mark the new point as D. Draw a new line BD.
Geometry
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G 2 11
SERIES TOPIC
2D shapes – triangles
2 In the right half of the box below, draw a triangle with the following specifications:
Line AC: horizontal, 6 cm
Angle A: 90°
Line AB: vertical, 5 cm (rule along the dotted line)
a Draw line BC. Measure and record the length of sides and the size of the angles.
d Draw a 6 cm line AD. This will take the triangle into the left side of the box. Draw line DB. Measure and
record the length of sides and the size of the angles.
12 G 2 Geometry
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2D shapes – circles
A circle is also a 2D shape. It is a curve with its points a fixed distance from the centre.
1 Using a compass, draw 3 circles with different radii (radiuses). Measure their radii and diameters and
label them.
2 From this, what do you notice about the relationship between the radius and the diameter of circles?
3 Follow the instructions to create this circle pattern. On a separate piece of paper, draw a line like the one
below, in the middle of the page.
a Place the compass point on the
dot on the line and draw a circle.
b Using the intersection points on
the line as the centre, draw a
same sized circle either side of
the first circle.
c Add 4 more circles using the new
points of intersection as your
compass point. Make sure they
are also the same size.
d Colour the design you’ve made.
Geometry
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G 2 13
SERIES TOPIC
The shapes within apply
Getting
ready We can construct regular shapes inside circles. You will use what you know about
angles and degrees to help you. You’ll also need a protractor and a compass.
________° ÷ 6 = 60°
So, from the centre we draw 6 lines, each with angles of 60˚ between them.
Extend the lines to the edge of the circle.
Now, join the points where the lines meet the circle edge. Ta da!
What to
do next It’s your turn. Use the circles below to make a regular octagon and a regular decagon.
How many angles will you need for each shape? What will their angle size be?
Place your protractor along the line in the circle with the centre point of the
protractor on the dot. Measure the angle needed and draw your next line.
Repeat this process until all lines are drawn.
Join the points where the lines meet the circle. Has it worked?
octagon decagon
14 G 2 Geometry
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SERIES TOPIC
Rip it up investigate
Getting
ready It is said that all quadrilaterals have an angle sum of
360˚. Your job is to prove it without using a protractor.
1 2
4 3
What to Try this experiment with 2 other kinds of quadrilaterals. They can be as irregular
do next
as you like.
Geometry
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G 2 15
SERIES TOPIC
Transformation, tessellation and symmetry – line symmetry
Reflective or line symmetry describes mirror image, when one half of a shape or picture matches
the other exactly. The middle line that divides the two halves is called the line of symmetry.
Shapes may have:
more than
no line of symmetry one line of symmetry one line of symmetry
1 Lines of symmetry have been drawn on these shapes. Trace over the ones drawn correctly. Cross out any
that are incorrect. Add any you think have been missed.
a b c
16 G 3 Geometry
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Transformation, tessellation and symmetry – rotational symmetry
1 Turn these shapes in your head. Do they have rotational symmetry? If so, what is the order?
a b c d
2 A great way to understand rotational symmetry is to use the computer. There are lots of programs you
can use. These instructions are for a word processing program:
a Open a new blank document.
b Select a shape from the autoshape menu (in the drawing toolbar) and draw it.
c Select the shape again and you’ll see a little green filled circle. This is the rotate tool.
d Turn the shape and watch the dotted lines. Count how many times the shapes match during a full rotation.
e Draw some of the shapes you created below. Note whether they have rotational symmetry and, if so,
what order.
Geometry
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G 3 17
SERIES TOPIC
Transformation, tessellation and symmetry – transformation
1 Look at these figures. Decide if each figure has been reflected, translated or rotated:
a b c
2 When some letters of the alphabet are rotated 180° (in a half circle), they become other letters. (This
depends on how you write them of course.) An example of this is d. Turn it halfway around and it
becomes p. What other letters can you find that do this?
d p
18 G 3 Geometry
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Transformation, tessellation and symmetry – transformation
4 Look at the figure. Draw what it will look like if is reflected. Next, draw what the reflected figure will look
like when rotated a quarter turn anticlockwise.
6 Some words look the same when they’re written backwards. MUM is an example. Can you find some more?
Geometry
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G 3 19
SERIES TOPIC
Transformation, tessellation and symmetry – tessellation
Tessellation means covering a surface with a pattern of 2D shapes with no gaps or spaces. When
we tessellate shapes, we often flip or turn the shapes so they fit together.
Some shapes will tessellate on their own, some will tessellate if they are teamed with others and
some won’t tessellate at all.
1 Use pattern blocks to find some shape teams that will tessellate and record them here. There are 7 teams.
Can you find them all? Here is one example to get you started:
l large octagons, small squares
2 Look at these regular shapes. Which will tessellate on their own? Colour them. Use pattern blocks if it helps.
Why will these shapes tessellate? Partly it is because their sides are the same
length. But regular pentagons have sides the same length, and they won’t.
So why is it? The answer is in the vertex.
Look at these 4 squares. The corners that join each have an angle of 90˚.
Together these add to 360˚ – a full turn. They each take up one quarter of
a full turn. We can name this pattern as 4, 4, 4, 4.
3 Look at these tessellations and work out the sum of the angles at the vertex:
vertex
a The angle sum of an equilateral triangle is _____˚. a The angle sum of a regular hexagon is ______˚.
c ______ triangles meet at the vertex. c ______ hexagons meet at the vertex.
e We can name this pattern as 3, 3, __, __, __, __ e We can name this pattern as ___, ___, ___ as
as there are six 3-sided shapes. there are three 6-sided shapes.
20 G 3 Geometry
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Transformation, tessellation and symmetry – tessellation
4 Look at the vertex in this semi-regular tessellation of octagons
and squares. How many angles meet? What are their size?
Does the 360° rule work? Explain your reasoning.
copy
This is
the vertex
This is
the vertex
6 The angle size of a regular pentagon is 108˚. These won’t tessellate because
108˚ + 108˚ + 108˚ + 108˚ + 108˚ = 540˚
What if we use an irregular pentagon? One with 5 sides but with unequal sides and angles?
Cut out these pentagons and find a way to tessellate them. Work out what each angle must be.
Remember the angles at the join must equal 360˚.
Geometry
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G 3 21
SERIES TOPIC
Transformation, tessellation and symmetry – enlargement
and reduction
a b
________________________________
________________________________
________________________________
________________________________
22 G 3 Geometry
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SERIES TOPIC
Picture perfect create
Getting
ready You’re going to draw a picture for a
partner on the small grid. You’ll then
swap pictures with your partner and
enlarge each other’s pictures.
What
to do Choose a picture to create. Keep it simple
and decide if you want to colour it or keep
it black and white. You may want to sketch
it on scrap paper first.
What to
do next Switch pictures with your partner and recreate their masterpiece as a larger masterpiece.
Geometry
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G 3 23
SERIES TOPIC
Design diva create
Getting
ready Many cultures and art styles use tessellations as a basis for
creating intricate and beautiful patterns. You will use this
tessellated grid as a basis for your own eye-catching design.
What Choose one of the designs on the left to recreate on this grid or create one of
to do
your own:
24 G 3 Geometry
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3D shapes – types and properties
1 How do 3D shapes differ from 2D shapes? Imagine you’re giving an explanation to a younger child.
What would you say and/or draw?
Remember the surfaces of a 3D shape are 2D shapes. Where 2 surfaces meet is called the edge.
The point where 2 or more surfaces meet is called the vertex. If we are talking about more than
one vertex we call them vertices.
2 How many surfaces, edges and vertices does each of these shapes have?
a b c d
Some 3D shapes are polyhedrons. This means each surface is a polygon. The polyhedrons we most
commonly come across are pyramids and prisms.
Prisms have identical parallel faces joined by rectangles. Most prisms are named after their end faces.
Pyramids have a base with 3 or more straight sides. They have triangular faces which meet at a point.
They are named after their bases.
Another group of 3D shapes has one or more curved surfaces (e.g. spheres, cones and cylinders).
___ faces ___ edges ___ vertices ___ faces ___ edges ___ vertices ___ faces ___ edges ___ vertices
Geometry
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G 4 25
SERIES TOPIC
3D shapes – types and properties
4 You and a partner have 20 minutes to identify as many of these mystery 3D shapes as you can. Use
whatever resources you have to assist you – maths dictionaries, websites, Mathletics or solid shapes.
Different shapes are assigned different point values, so decide which answers you will spend the most
time on! You can score a possible 150 points. At the end of the 20 minutes your answers will be checked
and your scores tallied.
5 20 10
5 10 10
20 10 5
26 G 4 Geometry
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3D shapes – types and properties
5 Your job is to try and work out what should go in the box. Because we are incredibly nice people we’ll
give you the following hints:
• The answer is a number.
• You should find the missing information in the table below. Use solids to help you.
• Then, for each shape, try F + V – E and see what your answer is. It should always be the same. If not,
you’ve gone wrong somewhere.
Formula F+ V – E = F+ V – E = F+ V – E = F+ V – E =
It took Euler years to work this out and you’ve done it straight away. Well done! We suggest you take the
rest of the day off. Just run it by your teacher, we’re sure they’ll be up for it.
Geometry
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G 4 27
SERIES TOPIC
3D shapes – nets
A net is the pattern of a 3D shape, unfolded and laid flat. It helps to visualise how nets fold up to
create a 3D shape.
1 Fold each net ‘in your head’ then write its letter in the correct shape name box at the bottom of the page:
a b
c d
e f
Remember the
difference between
prisms and pyramids!
28 G 4 Geometry
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SERIES TOPIC
3D shapes – drawing 3D shapes
When we draw 3D shapes, we can draw dotted lines to indicate the surfaces, edges
and vertices we can’t see.
1 Add the dotted lines to these shapes to reveal the missing edges and vertices. The name of the shape may
guide you – a square based pyramid needs a square for its base and a rectangular prism has rectangles at
each end.
a b c d
e f g h
triangular based
cone rectangular prism hexagonal prism pyramid
Geometry
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G 4 29
SERIES TOPIC
3D shapes – drawing 3D shapes
3 Use the following information to help you identify and draw this mystery shape:
4 Now choose your own 3D shape and write a set of directions so that a partner can identify and draw it:
We can also use isometric dot paper or hexagonal grids to guide us when we draw 3D objects.
5 Use the dot paper to draw a cube, a rectangular prism and a triangular pyramid. The first one has been
done for you.
30
G 4
Geometry
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SERIES TOPIC
To cube or not to cube … investigate
Getting
ready Cubes have six faces and can be created
from a number of nets. Your job is to
find them all. Work with a partner.
copy
What How many nets can you find that will fold to make a cube? Use the grid below to
to do
help you draw and test your designs. You may need a few copies of the grid.
Geometry
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G 4 31
SERIES TOPIC
Form an orderly queue apply
Getting
ready Look at the 3D shapes below. Can you line them up so each shape shares the same
face with the one next to it? They don’t have to be the same size, but the faces must
match. It will help to use solids.
What
to do It may help to name each shape and list its 2D faces. The first one has been done for you.
Work with a partner and record your solution. You may like to describe it or perhaps
take a digital photograph.
hexagonal prism
• hexagon
• rectangle
What to
do next Can you find more than one solution? How many can you find?
Can you make a loop with the shapes?
32 G 4 Geometry
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SERIES TOPIC