Geometry
1.0 Students demonstrate understanding by identifying and
giving examples of undefined terms, axioms, theorems, and inductive and
deductive reasoning.
2.0 Students write geometric proofs, including proofs by
contradiction.
3.0 Students construct and judge the validity of a logical argument and
give counterexamples to disprove a statement.
4.0 Students prove basic theorems involving congruence and
similarity.
5.0 Students prove that triangles are congruent or similar, and they are
able to use the concept of corresponding parts of congruent triangles.
6.0 Students know and are able to use the triangle
inequality theorem.
7.0 Students prove and use theorems involving the properties of parallel
lines cut by a transversal, the properties of quadrilaterals, and the
properties of circles.
8.0 Students know, derive, and solve problems involving
the perimeter, circumference, area, volume, lateral area, and surface area of
common geometric figures.
9.0 Students compute the volumes and surface areas of
prisms, pyramids, cylinders, cones, and spheres; and students commit to memory
the formulas for prisms, pyramids, and cylinders.
10.0 Students compute areas of polygons, including
rectangles, scalene triangles, equilateral triangles, rhombi, parallelograms,
and trapezoids.
11.0 Students determine how changes in dimensions affect
the perimeter, area, and volume of common geometric figures and solids.
12.0 Students find and use measures of sides and of interior and
exterior angles of triangles and polygons to classify figures and solve
problems.
13.0 Students prove relationships between angles in
polygons by using properties of complementary, supplementary, vertical, and
exterior angles.
14.0 Students prove the Pythagorean theorem.
15.0 Students use the Pythagorean theorem to
determine distance and find missing lengths of sides of right triangles.
16.0 Students perform basic constructions with a
straightedge and compass, such as angle bisectors, perpendicular bisectors, and
the line parallel to a given line through a point off the line.
17.0 Students prove theorems by using coordinate geometry,
including the midpoint of a line segment, the distance formula, and various
forms of equations of lines and circles.
18.0 Students know the definitions of the basic
trigonometric functions defined by the angles of a right triangle. They also
know and are able to use elementary relationships between them. For example,
tan( x ) = sin( x )/cos( x ),
(sin( x )) 2 + (cos( x )) 2 = 1.
19.0 Students use trigonometric functions to solve for an
unknown length of a side of a right triangle, given an angle and a length of a
side.
20.0 Students know and are able to use angle and side
relationships in problems with special right triangles, such as 30°, 60°, and
90° triangles and 45°, 45°, and 90° triangles.
21.0 Students prove and solve problems regarding relationships
among chords, secants, tangents, inscribed angles, and inscribed and
circumscribed polygons of circles.
22.0 Students know the effect of rigid motions on figures
in the coordinate plane and space, including rotations, translations, and
reflections.