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The goal of this activity is to introduce a regular tessellation of the plane and conjecture which shapes give regular tessellations. Students construct arguments for which shapes can and cannot be used to make a regular tessellation (MP3). The focus is on experimenting with shapes and noticing that in order for a shape to make a regular tessellation, we need to be able to put a whole number of those shapes together at a single vertex with no gaps and no overlaps. This greatly limits what angles the polygons can have and, as a result, there are only three regular tessellations of the plane. This conjecture will be demonstrated in the other two activities of this lesson.
In the digital version of the activity, students use an applet to decide if regular polygons create tessellations. The applet allows students to work with many copies of each polygon without tracing. The digital version may be preferable if time is limited.
Display a table for all to see with at least two columns keeping track of which regular polygons make a tessellation and which do not. Students may need a reminder that regular polygons are polygons with all congruent sides and angles. A third column could be used for extra comments (for example, about angle size of the polygon or other remarks). Here is an example of a table that could be used:
| regular polygon | tessellate? | notes |
|---|---|---|
| octagon | ||
| hexagon | ||
| pentagon | ||
| square | ||
| triangle |
Introduce the idea of a regular tessellation:
Show some pictures of tessellations that are not regular, and ask students to identify why they are not (for example, several different polygons are used, edges of polygons do not match up completely). Ask students which of the tessellations pictured here are regular tessellations (only the one with squares):
Make tracing paper available to all students. Tell students that they can use the tracing paper to put together several copies of the polygons.
For each shape (triangle, square, pentagon, hexagon, and octagon), decide if you can use that shape to make a regular tessellation of the plane. Explain your reasoning.
To help students think more about what shapes do and do not tessellate and why, ask:
During the discussion, fill out the table, indicating that it is possible to make a tessellation with equilateral triangles, squares, and hexagons, but not with pentagons or octagons.
The goal of this activity is to verify, via angle calculations, that equilateral triangles and regular hexagons can be used to make regular tessellations of the plane. Students have encountered the equilateral triangle plane tessellations earlier in grade 8 when working on an isometric grid. In order to complete their investigation of regular tessellations of the plane, it remains to be shown that no other polygons work. This will be done in the next activity.
Students are required to reason abstractly and quantitatively in this activity (MP2). Tracing paper indicates that six equilateral triangles can be put together sharing a single vertex. Showing that this is true for abstract equilateral triangles requires careful reasoning about angle measures.
In the previous task, equilateral triangles, squares, and hexagons appeared to make regular tessellations of the plane. Tell students that the goal of this activity is to use geometry to verify that they do.
Refer students to regular polygons printed in the previous activity for a visual representation of an equilateral triangle.
Students may know that an equilateral triangle has 60-degree angles but may not be able to explain why or how this connects to regular hexagons. If students are having trouble explaining their thinking, consider asking:
Consider asking the following questions to lead the discussion of this activity:
Consider showing students an isometric grid, used earlier in grade 8 for experimenting with transformations, and ask them how this relates to tessellations. (It shows a tessellation with equilateral triangles.)
Point out that this activity provides a mathematical justification for the “yes” in the table for triangles and hexagons.
The goal of this activity is to show that only triangles, squares, and hexagons give regular tessellations of the plane. The method used is experimentation with other regular polygons. The key observation is that the angles on regular polygons get larger as we add more sides, which is a good example of observing structure (MP7). Since three is the smallest number of polygons that can meet at a vertex in a regular tessellation, this means that once we pass six sides (hexagons), we will not find any further regular tessellations. The activities in this lesson now show that there are three and only three regular tessellations of the plane: triangles, squares, and hexagons.
In the digital version of the activity, students use an applet to decide if other regular polygons create tessellations. The applet allows students to work with many copies of each polygon without tracing. The digital version may be preferable if time is limited.
Ask students, “Are there some other regular polygons, other than equilateral triangles, squares, and hexagons, that can be used to give regular tessellations of the plane?” Some students may suggest regular polygons with more sides than the ones they have seen already, others may think that there are no other possibilities. Tell students that for this activity, they are going to investigate polygons with 7, 9, 10, 11, and 12 sides to see if they do or do not tessellate and why.
Provide access to tracing paper and protractors and tell students that they can use these to explore their conjectures.
Can you make a regular tessellation of the plane using regular polygons with 7 sides? What about 9 sides? 10 sides? 11 sides? 12 sides? Explain.
Which polygons can be used to make regular tessellations of the plane?
Consider asking the following questions:
“Why can’t there be any regular tessellations with polygons of more than 6 sides?” (Only 2 could meet at a vertex, but this isn’t possible since the angles have to add up to 360 degrees.)
There are only 3 regular tessellations of the plane. Ask students if they have encountered these tessellations before and if so, where. For example:
If students are not sure how to explain their reasoning for why some of the shapes do not tessellate, consider asking: