Categories
Pythagorean Theorem Similarity, Right Triangles and Trigonometry

“All the sides in the 6, 8, 10 triangle are equal.”

lisa1

lisa2

What interesting mistakes! Let’s make everything that’s puzzling about these explicit.

“6, 8 are equal, but 10 isn’t equal.” 

  • Does this mean that 6 and 8 are equal to each other? Or that 6 is equal, 8 is equal, but 10 is not equal. (To what???)
  • What on Earth does it mean that 10 isn’t equal!
  • What exactly does this student think “right triangle” means? Does he think it means that all the sides are equal?

“Yes, because all the sides are equal.”

  • How? You drew a picture showing that the triangle has sides of length 6, 8 and 10!
  • So a right triangle needs to have all equal sides?

This is mysterious to me, but what’s important is to not dismiss these students as hopelessly confused. Take the second mistake. What we’ve discovered is that you can know a lot and still think that a 6, 8, 10 triangle has all equal sides. That’s really cool!

As far as shedding light on these mistakes, I’m really having trouble coming up with anything that makes sense. I’d say that the top student is not saying that 6 and 8 are equal to each other, but then what is that student saying?

Categories
Geometric Measurement and Dimension Geometry

Sides and angles

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Tina asks:

Why do kids have such a hard time distinguishing between sides and angles? They are so different in my mind, I don’t even know how to explain the difference.

Thoughts?

Categories
Exact Values of Trig Functions Trigonometric Functions

If sin(x)/cos(x) = 3/5, then 1/cos(x) = 1/5.

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The submitter asks: What would you write as feedback here? What would actually help this kid?

I ask: What’s the role of written feedback, more generally?

(Thanks again, Tina!)

Categories
Trig Identities Trigonometric Functions

Trig Identities Unteach Functions

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Hypothesis: Proving trig identities unteaches functions.

After all, thinking of these as functions really just gets in the way, so all of our sensible students just treat these functions like variables.

(Thanks, Tina!)