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Area of Squares, Rectangles, Parallelograms, and Triangles

Area of Squares, Rectangles, Parallelograms, and Triangles

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Page 1: Area of Squares, Rectangles, Parallelograms, and Triangles

Area of Squares, Rectangles, Parallelograms, and Triangles

Page 2: Area of Squares, Rectangles, Parallelograms, and Triangles

The area of a shape is the number of square units contained within it.

This shape has an area of 5 square units, or 5 units²

Page 3: Area of Squares, Rectangles, Parallelograms, and Triangles

Rectangles are made up of equal-sized rows of unit squares. Therefore, multiply how many squares are in each row by the number of rows.

Area of rectangle = length x width

Page 4: Area of Squares, Rectangles, Parallelograms, and Triangles
Page 5: Area of Squares, Rectangles, Parallelograms, and Triangles
Page 6: Area of Squares, Rectangles, Parallelograms, and Triangles

Squares are specific rectangles so their area is also calculated by length x width. However, since all sides are equal, we can say

Area of square = side x side = side²

Page 7: Area of Squares, Rectangles, Parallelograms, and Triangles
Page 8: Area of Squares, Rectangles, Parallelograms, and Triangles
Page 9: Area of Squares, Rectangles, Parallelograms, and Triangles

Parallelograms can be turned into rectangles so they also share the same area formula.

Make sure you use the base and the height, which are perpendicular (form right angles with each other).

Base = 5 m and height = 3 m because they form a right angle. The 4 m (called slant height) is not used at all.

Area = base x height = 5 m x 3 m = 15 m²

Page 10: Area of Squares, Rectangles, Parallelograms, and Triangles
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A parallelogram can always be divided into two triangles with the same base and height.

Since base x height is the area of the full parallelogram and a triangle is only half of a parallelogram, multiply by ½

Area of a triangle = ½ x base x height

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Page 17: Area of Squares, Rectangles, Parallelograms, and Triangles

Direct Station We will go through a Pearson lesson which focuses

on finding the area of other shapes.

Remember, the way we found the total degrees in any polygon was to split it up into simpler shapes. Perhaps we can use a similar strategy for area.

Page 18: Area of Squares, Rectangles, Parallelograms, and Triangles

Independent Station You will complete an activity and game in order to

review perimeter of rectangles and then complete a Google Form.

Make sure yoursound is off!