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Angles and Transversals Lesson.

Maths • Year Year 8 • 50 • 15 students • Created with AI following Aligned with New Zealand Curriculum

Maths
8Year Year 8
50
15 students
20 April 2024

Teaching Instructions

This is a relief teacher plan so please make it very clear for them to understand and not too many moving parts for them. The lesson will be on Angles associated with transversals. I need a very fast revision of what we learned in the last lesson which was Angles at a point and geometric arguments. I need elements of whole class, group and independent work. Please make the work as fun and engaging as possible. Please include connections to the achievement objectives and add a WALT. Add a list of resources I will need. Make sure that high, middle and low level learners are catered for. Include an element of an exit ticket so I can check on how they are understanding.

Lesson Plan: Angles Associated with Transversals

Subject: Mathematics

Year Level: Year 8

Duration: 50 minutes

Class Size: 15 students

WALT (We Are Learning To)

  • Understand and identify the different types of angles formed when a transversal cuts through two parallel lines.

Achievement Objectives

Linked to the New Zealand Curriculum - Mathematics and Statistics, level 4:

  • Geometry and Measurement (GM4-2): "Apply the relationships between angles and other geometric features to find unknown angles”.

Refer to NZ Curriculum Online - Mathematics for more details.


Lesson Summary

This lesson aims to consolidate prior knowledge of angles at a point and geometric arguments and introduce the concept of angles associated with transversals, including corresponding, alternate, and co-interior angles when a transversal crosses parallel lines. This session will include a quick revision, a mix of whole class, group, and independent activities, and will conclude with an exit ticket to assess understanding.


Resources Needed

  • Whiteboard and markers
  • Projector/Smartboard for displaying visuals and diagrams
  • Printed worksheets (for group and independent work)
  • Rulers and protractors for each student
  • Printed exit tickets
  • Coloured pencils/markers (for diagram labelling and creativity)

Lesson Plan

Introduction (10 minutes)

  1. Quick Review:

    • Start with a 5-minute interactive whiteboard quiz revising 'Angles at a point' and 'Geometric arguments'.
    • Use simple diagrams to prompt students to recall and state angle properties (e.g., angles around a point sum to 360°).
  2. Introduction to New Topic:

    • Introduce the topic of 'Angles associated with transversals'.
    • Briefly explain what transversals are and showcase diagrams on the board or via projector illustrating transversals cutting through parallel lines.

Main Activity (30 minutes)

  1. Whole Class Demonstration:

    • Demonstrate how to identify corresponding, alternate, and co-interior angles.
    • Discuss real-life examples where these might be applicable (e.g., in engineering, construction).
  2. Group Work:

    • Divide the class into groups of three.
    • Hand out worksheets with different diagrams of parallel lines cut by a transversal.
    • Assign each group to find and colour-code each type of angle on the worksheet.
  3. Independent Practice:

    • Provide each student with a simple drawing task where they create their own diagrams of parallel lines and a transversal and then identify and label the angles.
    • Walk around to provide support, especially targeting help to different ability groups (offer hints for lower-level, challenge higher-level learners with additional angle calculation tasks).

Conclusion (10 minutes)

  1. Summary & Recap:

    • Invite a few students to present their diagrams and explain the angle relationships they identified.
    • Recap the key points and address any misconceptions.
  2. Exit Ticket:

    • Distribute exit tickets with a diagram and a couple of quick questions to assess understanding of the lesson’s key concepts.
    • Questions can vary in difficulty to cater to all learning levels.

Differentiation

  • Higher-level learners: Include challenge tasks involving algebraic expressions to represent and solve for unknown angles.
  • Middle-level learners: Provide examples and more guided practice on identifying angles.
  • Lower-level learners: Give additional one-on-one explanation and simpler practice tasks with fewer angles to focus on at a time.

Follow-Up

Review the exit tickets to identify areas where students are struggling and plan remedial actions or advanced tasks for the next lesson. Discuss real-world applications and perhaps involve a practical activity like measuring angles in the school environment using protractors and discussing their significance.

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