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Transforming Geometric Proof with Reflections, Rotations and Translations

Transforming Geometric Proof with Reflections, Rotations and Translations. Kristin A. Camenga Kristin.camenga@houghton.edu Houghton College April 15, 2011 All information from this talk will be posted at the website listed on the handout.

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Transforming Geometric Proof with Reflections, Rotations and Translations

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  1. Transforming Geometric Proof with Reflections, Rotations and Translations Kristin A. Camenga Kristin.camenga@houghton.edu Houghton College April 15, 2011 All information from this talk will be posted at the website listed on the handout. campus.houghton.edu/webs/employees/kcamenga/teachers.htm

  2. Motivating Questions • What is transformational reasoning? • Why is transformational reasoning important? • How can transformational reasoning be used in the high school curriculum? • What does transformational reasoning contribute to student learning?

  3. What is transformational reasoning?

  4. Quadrilateral Transformations For each of the following quadrilaterals, describe the rotations and reflections that carry it onto itself: • Parallelogram • Rhombus • Rectangle • Square What connections do you notice?

  5. Quadrilateral Transformations

  6. Parallelograms by Symmetry If we rotate a parallelogram 180○ about the midpoint of a diagonal, • AC≅DB; AB≅DC • ∠B≅∠C, ∠A≅∠D • ∠BAD≅∠CDA, ∠CAD≅∠BDA • AB∥CD, CA∥DB

  7. The Isosceles Triangle Theorem Why are the base angles equal?

  8. The Isosceles Triangle Theorem • Traditional Method: Draw median and show triangles congruent. • Transformational method: Draw angle bisector and reflect triangle over it to see that angles coincide.

  9. Key ideas • Uses transformations: reflections, rotations, translations, dilations. • Depends on properties of the transformation: • Congruence is justified by showing one object is the image of the other under an isometry (preserves distance and angles). • Similarity is justified by showing one object is the image of the other under a similarity (preserves angle and ratio of distances).

  10. Why is transformational reasoning important?

  11. Common Core Standards • Congruence, similarity and symmetry are all defined in terms of transformations. • Triangle congruence criteria (SSS, SAS, ASA) are to be explained using rigid motions. • Standards for mathematical practice: • Construct viable arguments and critique the reasoning of others. • Look for and make use of structure.

  12. Mathematical Reasoning & Structure • Justifies results often stated without proof. • Encourages flexibility of thinking and use of multiple methods. • Foreshadows definition of a geometry via transformations. • Elucidates connections between geometry and algebra.

  13. How can transformational reasoning be used in the high school curriculum?

  14. Informal Reasoning & Memory • Uses the visual, intuitive sense of how a transformation maps one shape to another. • Builds on ideas of symmetry from elementary grades and could be used in middle school. • Helps with recall of theorems. • Builds geometric visualization • Examples: Isosceles Triangle Theorem, Parallelogram rotation

  15. Example: Arcs Cut by Parallel Lines (Informal) Given: AB∥CD Prove: arc AC ≅ arc BD Idea: Reflect over the diameter perpendicular to CD.

  16. Example: ASA(Informal) • Given: ∠A≅∠A’, AC≅A’C’, ∠C≅∠C’ • Prove: △ABC≅△A’B’C’ • Idea: • translate A to A’ • rotate △ABC until AC coincides with A’C’ • reflect over A’C’ if necessary. Then the whole triangle coincides!

  17. Rigorous Reasoning Pre-requisites • Transformations and their properties: • Isometries – reflections, rotations, translations • Preserve lengths • Preserve angles • Dilations • Preserve angles • Preserve ratios of lengths • Image lines are parallel to original lines • Symmetries of basic shapes (lines, circles) • Basic properties and axioms of geometry • Experience that our vision can trickus

  18. Example: Isosceles Triangle Theorem (Rigorous) Given: △ABC, where AB≅AC • Draw AD, the angle bisector of ∠BAC. Therefore, ∠BAD≅∠CAD. • Reflect over AD. • AD reflects to itself. • ∠BAD reflects to ∠CAD since the angles are congruent and share side AD. • AB reflects to AC since they are corresponding rays of angles which coincide after reflection. • B reflects to C since A reflects to itself and AB≅AC so the lengths along AB and AC coincide. • BD reflects to CD since B reflects to C and D reflects to itself and two points determine exactly one segment. • Since AB reflects to AC, B to C and BD to CD, ∠ABD reflects to ∠ACD. • Therefore ∠ABD≅∠ACD.

  19. Example: ASA(Rigorous) Given: ∠A≅∠A’, AC≅A’C’, ∠C≅∠C’ • Translate △ABC so that A coincides with A’. • Rotate △ABC so that ray AC coincides with ray A’C’. Since AC≅A’C’, C coincides with C’. • If B and B’ are on different sides of line AC, reflect △ABC over line AC. • Since ∠A≅∠A’ and AC and A’C’ coincide and are on the same side of the angle, ∠A coincides with ∠A’. • Since the angles coincide, the other rays AB and A’B’ coincide. • Similarly, since ∠C≅∠C’ and AC and A’C’ coincide, ∠C coincides with ∠C’ and the other rays CB and C’B’ coincide. • Since ray AB coincides with ray A’B’ and ray CB with ray C’B’and two lines intersect in at most one point, B coincides with B’. • Since all sides and angles coincide, △ABC≅△A’B’C’.

  20. Example: Midline of triangle (Rigorous) Given: △ABC, D and E are midpoints of AB and AC respectively • Apply a dilation of factor ½ to △ABC from point A. • Then B’ = D and C’=E by definition of dilation (B’ on AB, C’ on CE). • Since dilation preserves ratio of lengths, DE = ½BC. • BC∥DE because the image DE is parallel to the original BC under a dilation.

  21. Example: Arcs Cut by Parallel Lines (Rigorous) Given: AB∥CD Prove: arc AC ≅ arc BD Draw diameter EF perpendicular to CD, intersecting CD at H and AB at G. • Since AB ∥CD, EH⊥ AB since it makes the same angle with both CD and AB. • Since diameters bisect chords, CH≅HD and AG≅GB. • Reflect over EF. • Since EF is a diameter, the circle reflects to itself. • Lines CD and AB reflect to themselves since they are perpendicular to EF. • Since CH≅HD and AG≅GB, A reflects to B and C reflects to D. • Since the circle reflects to itself and the endpoints of arc AC reflect to the endpoints of arc BD, arc AC reflects to arc BD. • Therefore arc AC ≅ arc BD.

  22. Example: Parallelograms(Rigorous) Given: Parallelogram ABDC • Draw diagonal AD and let P be the midpoint of AD. • Rotate the figure 180⁰ about point P. • Line AD rotates to itself. • Since P is the midpoint of AD, A and D rotate to each other. • By definition of parallelogram, AB∥CD and AC∥BD, ∠BAD≅∠CDA and ∠CAD≅∠BDA. Therefore the two pairs of angles, ∠BAD and ∠CDA , and ∠CAD and ∠BDA, rotate to each other. • Since the angles ∠CAD and ∠BDA coincide, the rays AC and DB coincide. Similarly, rays AB and DC coincide because ∠BAD and ∠CDA coincide. • Since two lines intersect in only one point, C, the intersection of AC and DC, rotates to B, the intersection of DB and AB, and vice versa. • Therefore the image of parallelogram ABDC is parallelogram DCAB. • Based on what coincides, AC≅DB, AB≅DC, ∠B≅∠C, △ABD≅△DCA, and PC≅PB.

  23. Connecting Ideas within Geometry • Transformations provide another way to help students make conceptual connections between ideas. • Examples: • Quadrilateral classification • Perpendicular bisector • Definition using transformations

  24. Definition Transformations can be used to define objects and illustrate the structure of mathematical reasoning. • Example: a parallelogram can be defined as a quadrilateral with 180⁰ rotational symmetry. • The standard properties of parallelograms follow almost immediately from the definition; based on these we can prove opposite sides are parallel.

  25. What does transformational reasoning contribute to student learning?

  26. Student Benefits • Builds on students’ intuitive ideas so they can participate in proof from the beginning. • Encourages visual and spatial thinking, helping students consider the same ideas in multiple ways. • Serves as a guide for students to remember theorems and figure out problems. • Promotes understanding by offering an alternate explanation.

  27. Student Benefits • Reinforces properties of transformations. • Applies axioms or theorems we don’t use frequently. • Motivates changing perspective between piece-by-piece and global approaches. • Generalizes more easily to other geometries, which are characterized by their symmetries.

  28. Your turn!

  29. Try using transformational reasoning! • Vertical angles are congruent. • If the base angles of a triangle are congruent, then the sides opposite those angles are congruent. • If a quadrilateral has diagonals that are perpendicular bisectors of each other, then it is a rhombus. • SAS: If two right triangles have two corresponding pairs of sides congruent and the included angles congruent, then the triangles are congruent.

  30. Ways to include transformational reasoning in your classroom • Ask students to look for symmetry regularly! • When introducing transformations, apply them to common objects and ask what the symmetry implies about the object. • Use transformations to organize information and remember relationships. • Share another method of proof for a theorem already in your curriculum.

  31. Transformational Reasoning in Algebra • The ideas of symmetry and transformation have application in algebra as well. • This can help students connect algebra and geometry in a new way.

  32. Example: Commutativity of Multiplication (Informal) Show mxn=nxm, • Represent mxn as an array of dots with m rows and n columns. • Rotate the array by 90 degrees and you have n rows and m columns, or nxm dots. • Rotation preserves length & area, so these are the same number! … … … . . . … … … … … … … … . . . … … …

  33. Symmetries of Equations • Translations and reflections of graphs • Odd & even functions • Circles: x2 + y2 = r2 • Unit circle trigonometry: sin(π/2-x) = cos(x)

  34. Resources • Wallace, Edward C., and West, Stephen F., Roads to Geometry: section on transformational proof • Henderson, David W., and Taimina, Daina, Experiencing Geometry • The eyeballing game http://woodgears.ca/eyeball/ These slides can be found at http://campus.houghton.edu/webs/employees/kcamenga/teachers.htm

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