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The purpose of this Warm-up is to elicit the idea that shapes can be used to compose other shapes, which will be useful when students compose shapes from equal-size shapes in a later activity. While students may notice and wonder many things about this image, identifying the shapes within the picture and noticing how they work together to compose something larger are the important discussion points.
Consider recording on chart paper the shapes students name as they describe the image, for them to reference during the lesson. In addition to the vocabulary students used in the previous section (triangle, quadrilateral, hexagon), it may be helpful to review “trapezoid” and “rhombus” as names of pattern block shapes. It is not necessary to provide a mathematical definition for these terms.
What do you notice? What do you wonder?
The purpose of this activity is for students to compose the same shape in different ways. Students create a butterfly by composing hexagons, using different pattern blocks. Students are encouraged to explain how they composed their hexagons, using the geometric language they’ve learned in previous lessons (MP6). For example, “I used 1 trapezoid and 3 triangles to make a hexagon.” Throughout the activity, listen for the ways students describe how they can compose a shape from, or decompose a shape into, smaller shapes.
Monitor for and select students, with the following approaches, to share in the Activity Synthesis:
The approaches are sequenced from hexagons composed of equal-size shapes to those composed of different shapes to help students notice and describe shapes that are composed of equal-size pieces and those that are not. Aim to elicit both key mathematical ideas and a variety of student voices, especially students who haven’t shared recently.
MLR8 Discussion Supports. Before students begin composing hexagons, remind them to use the name of each shape rather than the color of the pattern block. Invite students to chorally repeat the shape of each block.
Advances: Speaking Representation: Develop Language and Symbols. Provide students with access to the definitions of the shapes they will use, so they can have conversations using the correct vocabulary terms.
Supports accessibility for: Language, Memory
Mai used pattern blocks to make this design. Work with a partner to make the same design, without using yellow hexagons.
Centimeter Dot Paper - Standard
Isometric Dot Paper - Standard
The purpose of this activity is for students to compose shapes with two, three, or four equal-size shapes. The work of this activity lays the foundation for partitioning shapes into halves, thirds, or fourths.
Students make three different shapes, using two, three, or four pattern blocks of the same shape. They record their compositions on either the triangle or square dot paper. The structure of the dots helps students make sure that the parts of their shapes are equal.
What is the same? What is different?
Name each shape and explain how you composed it.
to compose a _____________________________________.
to compose a _____________________________________.
to compose a _____________________________________.
“Today we thought about how shapes could be made up of other shapes. We composed shapes from the same equal-size shapes.”
“Tell your partner 2 different shapes you made today. Describe what shapes you used to compose your shapes.” (I made a larger square out of 4 smaller squares. I made a hexagon with 2 trapezoids. I composed a pentagon with a square and a triangle.)
If students make the same hexagon multiple times, using the same shapes, consider asking: