Students will discuss new mathematical concepts, terms, and relationships connected to exploring and folding circles.
This activity provides students with the opportunity to explore a surprising number of geometric concepts through folding and unfolding a circular piece of paper. Each student will need a circle in order to participate fully in the activity as the teacher guides the students through a variety of folds. The activity is presented as a set of instructions for making the folds and is accompanied by a set of questions that the teacher directs the students to explore along with each fold. The activity is presented here in a direct-instruction format but can easily be adapted for small group or individualized learning. Asking meaningful questions is a key strategy in this particular activity.
This activity can be used in a variety of ways within a geometry unit. It is presented here as an opening activity to a geometry unit. Used in this way, it invites students to engage in geometric thinking and helps the teacher to determine what students might already know about geometry. Alternatively, this activity could serve as a fun way to review concepts studied in a geometry unit. It is important to keep in mind that students must be given adequate time to explore and make connections between models, concepts, and the related terminology.
3. Reason mathematically.
4. Communicate mathematically.
Invitation to Learn:
Prepare a set of pictures of objects that are circular or bring in actual
objects (such as coins, clock, Frisbee, etc.). Present them one at a time
and ask students to find an attribute that the objects have in common.
Instructional Procedures:
Students could observe geometry in art through looking at art prints that are available in many schools.
Students could begin creating their own geometry glossary that includes names of concepts, diagrams/examples of concepts, and symbols related to concepts.
Adaptations:
Although this activity is presented as one complete activity, the
teacher may decide to take only a few steps at a time in order to
thoroughly discuss the new mathematical concepts, terms, and
relationships connected to each fold. In presenting the activity this way, the teacher may want to prepare a handout with circles on it so that
students could sketch the concepts they folded.
Another variation the teacher might want to consider is to still present all of the folds in their entirety with only initial questions the first time around in order to show the broad scope of geometry concepts. The teacher then could follow with more specific questions related to each fold at later times.
Most students should be able to handle the folding. One modification a teacher might make, though, is to have each student check with a partner after each fold is made to make sure they agree with each other.
Have the students explore with their circles on their own to see what
new shapes they can find.
Homework & Family Connections
Have students take the shape hunt activity home and invite their
family members to participate in the search.
Observation and listening as students explore and provide reasons to support their conjectures. Identification of terms at the closure could be done as a paper-and-pencil check. The shape hunt could also serve as a written assessment. A geometry journal could serve as an ongoing place to record responses to teacher prompts, questions, or student inquiries related to geometry.