Lesson Objective

Students will be able to verify the properties of rotations, reflections, and translations, and describe the effect of dilations, translations, rotations, and reflections on two-dimensional figures using coordinates.

How do rigid transformations (translations, reflections, rotations) maintain the size and shape of a figure?  

How can we use coordinates to describe the effect of a sequence of transformations, including dilations?  

What is the difference between congruence (rigid transformations) and similarity (including dilations)?

Translation: A rigid transformation that slides a figure up, down, left, right, or a combination.  

Reflection: A rigid transformation that flips a figure over a line of reflection.  

Rotation: A rigid transformation that turns a figure clockwise or counterclockwise around a specified point.  

Dilation: A transformation that makes a figure smaller or larger by a specific scale factor while maintaining its proportions.  

Pre-image and Image: The original figure and the resulting figure after a transformation.

8.G.A.1a-c: Verify experimentally the properties of rotations, reflections, and translations.  

8.G.A.2: Understand congruence through a sequence of rigid transformations.  

8.G.A.3: Describe the effect of transformations on 2D figures using coordinates.  

8.G.A.4: Understand similarity through a sequence of transformations, including dilations.

Description: Students explore transformations on the coordinate plane.  

Purpose: To enable students to move beyond basic identification of shapes to proving congruence and similarity using mathematical rules and transformations.  

DOK Level: Level 3 (Strategic Thinking) – Students describe sequences of transformations that exhibit congruence or similarity between figures.

Dilation Misconception: Students may believe dilations only enlarge figures; provide examples of reductions as well.  

Negative Exponents: Confusing negative exponents in scale factors with making a figure negative rather than smaller.

Scaffolding: Provide tracing or parchment paper and mirrors for physical experimentation.  

Visual Aids: Use Vocabulary Cards with visual representations of each transformation.

Quiz

Exit Ticket

Student Work