Complementary angles
From Karnataka Open Educational Resources
Name of the activity
Brief blurb describing what the activity. If this has been borrowed from some external web site (for example, a non OER or OER site which had this idea and based on which the activity was developed)
Objectives
Introduce children to concept of complementary angles
Estimated Time
30 minutes
Prerequisites/Instructions, prior preparations, if any
Prior knowledge of point, lines, angles
Materials/ Resources needed
- Digital : Computer, geogebra application, projector.
- Non digital : Worksheet and pencil.
- Geogebra files : Complementary angles.ggb
Download this geogebra file from this link.
Process (How to do the activity)
- Prior hands on activity (optional – children can use news paper strips to make angles and place them together and notice if the resulting angle formed is a right angle).
- Students should be able to identify the types of angles in the file
- Let them attempt to join the two angles -They may try by coinciding different points or lines.
- Ask about the angle formed by joining the two angles?
- Challenge them to find another way to make a right angle using the two existing angles.
- Interchanging the position of the two angles – ask what they notice.
- If one angle is changed will the two together again form a complementary angle.
- Children can be asked to make note of the angle measures for different angles work sheet
- Observations made with angles seen so far.
- Ask if the angles have to be adjacent to be complementary pairs
- Record the values of the two angles and their sum in the worksheet
Sl No. Value of slider α Angle ABC Angle DEF Sum Angle ABC + Angle DEF
Is angle ABC complement of angle DEF .
- Evaluation at the end of the activity
- What are complementary pair of angles?
- Is it required for the pair of angles to be adjacent to be complementary?
- What types of angles form complementary pair?