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Chapter 1: Viewing Mathematics      Mathematics as Problem Solving The Role of Problem Solving o Central to the development and application of mathematics o Used extensively in all branches of mathematics o The Meaning of a Problem p. 36 o A problem is a situation for which the following conditions exist  It involves a question that represents a challenge for the individual  The question cannot be answered immediately by some routine procedures known to the individual  The individual accepts the challenge o “Can every map be colored with only four different colors if regions that have a border in common must be colored differently?” o “How can you cut a cake into eight pieces with three straight cuts?” o The Meaning of Problem Solving p. 37 o Problem solving is a process by which an individual uses previously learned concepts, facts, and relationships, along with various reasoning skills and strategies, to answer a question about a situation o Algorithms are known steps used for solving different types of equations – the problem solving process CANNOT be made into an algorithm o Answer vs. Solution  Answer – final result  Solution – process used to find the answer A Problem-Solving Model o George Polya’s model p. 39 o Understanding the problem o Making a plan o Carrying out the plan o Looking back o Estimation is the process of determining an answer that is reasonably close to the exact answer used in different stages of problem solving Problem-Solving Strategies o Make a model o Act it out o Choose an operation o Write an equation o Draw a diagram o Guess – check – revise o Simplify the problem o Make a list o Look for a pattern o Make a table o Use a specific case o Work backward o Use reasoning o Learning when and how to use problem solving strategies is an important problem solving skill Importance of Problem Solving o Mathematics is primarily used to solve problems in mathematics and in the real world o Learning to solve problems is the principal reason for studying mathematics o Mathematics is MUCH more than algorithms o Problem solving applies to all aspects of our lives, NOT just mathematics Chapter 10: Introducing Geometry 10.1 Basic Ideas of Geometry  Geometry in nature o Honey combs o Snow flakes o Fibonacci sequence  1, 1, 2, 3, 5, 8, 13, 21, 34, 55, …  Sunflowers  Ratio of counterclockwise spirals to clockwise spirals is often 55:34 or 34:21  pine cone  Ratio = 13:8 or 8:5  Golden ratio  Approximately 1.618  Ratio of successive Fibonacci numbers  Starfish  Snail shell  Geometry in human endeavors o Egyptian pyramids o Pentagon in Washington, D.C.  Defining basic ideas o Points, lines, planes, and space o Segments, rays, angles o Special angles and perpendicular lines o Circles and polygons o Triangles o Quadrilaterals 10.2 Solving Problems in Geometry  A traversable network is also considered to be a simple path  Network Traversability Theorem o All even vertices = traversable type 1 (start from any vertex) o Exactly 2 odd vertices = traversable type 2 (start at one odd vertex end at the other odd vertex) o >2 odd vertices = NOT traversable  Concurrency Relationships in Triangles Theorem o Centroid = intersection of all three triangle medians  Balance point  Center of gravity  Two thirds the distance from each vertex to the opposite side o Orthocenter = intersection of all three triangle heights o Circumcenter = intersection of all three triangle perpendicular bisectors  Center of the circle containing the triangle vertices or  Center of the circle that circumscribes said triangle  The triangle would be inscribed in the circle o Incenter = intersection of all three triangle angle bisectors  Center of a circle tangent to all three sides of the triangle  Center of the circle inscribed in the triangle  Euler’s line o contains 3 of the four points of concurrency o Centroid, Orthocenter, and Circumcenter form Euler’s line o Leonard Euler (1707-1783) Pretty famous guy!  Tangrams 10.3 More About Angles  Angles in Intersecting Lines o transversal – a line cutting through two or more distinct lines o alternate interior angles – congruent angles formed on opposite sides of a transversal between the two lines intersected o alternate exterior angles – congruent angles formed on opposite sides of a transversal outside the two lines intersected o corresponding angles – congruent angles formed on the same side of a transversal where one angle is between the two lines including one line and the other angle is outside including the other line of the two lines intersected o same-side interior angles – same-side interior angles are supplementary angles o same-side exterior angles – same-side exterior angles are supplementary angles o vertical angles – congruent angles formed by the intersection of any two distinct lines such that opposite pairs of angles are congruent  Angles in Polygons o sum of the interior angles of any polygon – the sum of the measures of the interior angles of an n-gon is (n – 2) 180 o sum of the exterior angles of any polygon – the sum of the exterior angles of any polygon is 360 o Interior angle measures for a regular polygon – the measure of each n  2180 interior angle of a regular n-gon is n o exterior angle measures for a regular polygon – the measure of an exterior 360 angle of a regular n-gon is n o central angle measure for a regular polygon – the measure of the central 360 angle of a regular n-gon is n  Angles in Circles o arc – portion of a circle cut off by a pair of rays o relating arc measure to angle measure – 1  mP = m(arc s) 2  angle inside the circle  angle vertex on circle 1  mP = [m(arc s) – m(arc r)] 2  angle outside the circle 1  mP = [m(arc s) + m(arc r)] 2  angle inside the circle  angle vertex NOT on the circle 10.4 More About Triangles  Congruent Triangles o Definition of congruent triangles – Two triangles are congruent if and only if, for some correspondence between the two triangles, each pair of corresponding sides are congruent and each pair of corresponding angles are congruent o Triangle congruence postulates  SSS – if all of the corresponding pairs of sides of a triangle are congruent, then the two triangles are congruent  SAS – If two sides and the included angle of the corresponding pairs of sides and angles of a triangle are congruent, then the two triangles are congruent  ASA – If two angles and the shared side of the corresponding pairs of angles and sides of a triangle are congruent, then the two triangles are congruent  AAS – If two angles and a non-shared side of the corresponding pairs of angles and sides of a triangle are congruent, then the two triangles are congruent  For Right Triangles ONLY –  HA – If the hypotenuse and one angle of the corresponding pairs of angles and sides of a right triangle are congruent, then the two right triangles are congruent  HL – If the hypotenuse and one leg of the corresponding pairs of sides of a right triangle are congruent, then the two right triangles are congruent  The Pythagorean Theorem o a2  b2  c 2 o a and b are legs of a right triangle o c is ALWAYS the hypotenuse of the right triangle o Pythagorean triples  Special Right Triangles  45, 45, 90 o c= a 2 OR o c= b 2  30, 60, 90 o c = 2a where a is the shorter leg o b= a 3 10.5 More About Quadrilaterals  Properties of Quadrilaterals o parallelogram – quadrilateral with two pairs of parallel sides  opposite sides are parallel  opposite sides are congruent  one pair of opposite sides are parallel and congruent  opposite angles are congruent  consecutive angles are supplementary  diagonals bisect each other o rectangle – quadrilateral with four right angles  a parallelogram is a rectangle if and only if  it has at least one right angle  its diagonals are congruent o rhombus – quadrilateral with four congruent sides  a parallelogram is a rhombus if and only if  it has four congruent sides  its diagonals bisect the angles  its diagonals are perpendicular bisectors of each other o square – quadrilateral with four right angles and four congruent sides  a square is a parallelogram if and only if  it is a rectangle with four congruent sides  it is a rhombus with a right angle  its diagonals are congruent and perpendicular bisectors of each other  its diagonals are congruent and bisect the angles Chapter Summary – p. 589 Key Terms, Concepts, and Generalizations – p. 591 Chapter Review – p. 592  Work on problems 1-22 in your groups  Questions?
 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
                                             
                                             
                                             
                                             
                                             
                                             
                                             
                                             
                                             
                       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