Lesson 3-Angles of Triangles
Lesson 3-Angles of Triangles
physical
development
socioemotional
U, An
U, An
U, Ap, An
A, E
Common Core standards (or GLCEs if not available in Common Core) addressed:
CCSS.MATH.CONTENT.8.G.A.5: Use informal arguments to establish facts about the angle sum and exterior angle of triangles, about the angles created when
parallel lines are cut by a transversal, and the angle-angle criterion for similarity of triangles.
(Note: Write as many as needed. Indicate taxonomy levels and connections to applicable national or state standards. If an objective applies to particular learners
write the name(s) of the learner(s) to whom it applies.)
*remember, understand, apply, analyze, evaluate, create
-Students must be able to measure angles by using a protractor and basic algebra to solve for a missing
angle measure, given the measures of the other angles. Students will also need to be able to use what
they have learned about adjacent, vertical, supplementary, corresponding, alternate interior, and
alternate exterior angles to solve for unknown angle measures.
Pre-assessment (for learning):
-Students will need to define corresponding angles, alternate interior, and alternate exterior angles at
the beginning of class. Use the homework as a guide, and also base achievement by the problems each
student did on their whiteboards during the previous lesson.
Outline assessment
activities
(applicable to this lesson)
-In the introduction of this lesson, students are encouraged to think of what the prefix tri- really
means to help students understand a triangle and the sum of its interior angles.
Formative (as learning):
-Students will solve problems on their individual whiteboards and show them to the teacher before
they can continue.
Summative (of learning):
-Homework will be assigned, and a test will be given at the end of this Unit.
What barriers might this
lesson present?
What will it take
neurodevelopmentally,
experientially,
emotionally, etc., for your
students to do this lesson?
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Materials-what materials
(books, handouts, etc) do
you need for this lesson
and are they ready to
use?
2 min
Components
Motivation
(opening/
introduction/
engagement)
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Development
(the largest
component or
main body of
the lesson)
5 min
10
min
4 min
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3-4
min
15
min
10
min
Closure
(conclusion,
culmination,
wrap-up)
Your reflection about the lesson, including evidence(s) of student learning and engagement, as well as ideas for improvement
for next time. (Write this after teaching the lesson, if you had a chance to teach it. If you did not teach this lesson, focus on the
process of preparing the lesson.)
11-13-14
This lesson went very well! At the beginning of class, I reviewed with the students the material from the previous day that
seemed confusing. I had the class split into two groups, and as they worked on their worksheets, Ms. Mak and I helped the
students in our groups, and this was just enough for the students to understand and determine different types of congruent
angles and solve for angle measures. After this review, I had students cut their paper triangles as described in this lesson, and
they were able to apply what they previously knew and what they observed about the paper triangle pieces to conclude that
the sum of the interior angels of any triangle is 180 degrees. I then gave the students practice problems using one variable and
also two-step equations to solve for missing angle measures. Then we moved on to learn about exterior angles of triangles and
how to measure them. The students caught on quick and were excited to work on practice problems. Overall, this lesson went
very well, the students met their goals, and the students were engaged. The only thing I might try differently is adding a more
challenging element, as this concept seemed rather easy for this class.
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