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Showing 41 - 50 of 98 Standards

Standard Identifier: G-CO.2

Grade Range: 7–12
Domain: Congruence
Discipline: Math I
Conceptual Category: Geometry

Cluster:
Experiment with transformations in the plane.

Standard:
Represent transformations in the plane using, e.g., transparencies and geometry software; describe transformations as functions that take points in the plane as inputs and give other points as outputs. Compare transformations that preserve distance and angle to those that do not (e.g., translation versus horizontal stretch).

Standard Identifier: G-CO.3

Grade Range: 7–12
Domain: Congruence
Discipline: Math I
Conceptual Category: Geometry

Cluster:
Experiment with transformations in the plane.

Standard:
Given a rectangle, parallelogram, trapezoid, or regular polygon, describe the rotations and reflections that carry it onto itself.

Standard Identifier: G-CO.4

Grade Range: 7–12
Domain: Congruence
Discipline: Math I
Conceptual Category: Geometry

Cluster:
Experiment with transformations in the plane.

Standard:
Develop definitions of rotations, reflections, and translations in terms of angles, circles, perpendicular lines, parallel lines, and line segments.

Standard Identifier: G-CO.5

Grade Range: 7–12
Domain: Congruence
Discipline: Math I
Conceptual Category: Geometry

Cluster:
Experiment with transformations in the plane.

Standard:
Given a geometric figure and a rotation, reflection, or translation, draw the transformed figure using, e.g., graph paper, tracing paper, or geometry software. Specify a sequence of transformations that will carry a given figure onto another.

Standard Identifier: G-CO.6

Grade Range: 7–12
Domain: Congruence
Discipline: Math I
Conceptual Category: Geometry

Cluster:
Understand congruence in terms of rigid motions. [Build on rigid motions as a familiar starting point for development of concept of geometric proof.]

Standard:
Use geometric descriptions of rigid motions to transform figures and to predict the effect of a given rigid motion on a given figure; given two figures, use the definition of congruence in terms of rigid motions to decide if they are congruent.

Standard Identifier: G-CO.7

Grade Range: 7–12
Domain: Congruence
Discipline: Math I
Conceptual Category: Geometry

Cluster:
Understand congruence in terms of rigid motions. [Build on rigid motions as a familiar starting point for development of concept of geometric proof.]

Standard:
Use the definition of congruence in terms of rigid motions to show that two triangles are congruent if and only if corresponding pairs of sides and corresponding pairs of angles are congruent.

Standard Identifier: G-CO.8

Grade Range: 7–12
Domain: Congruence
Discipline: Math I
Conceptual Category: Geometry

Cluster:
Understand congruence in terms of rigid motions. [Build on rigid motions as a familiar starting point for development of concept of geometric proof.]

Standard:
Explain how the criteria for triangle congruence (ASA, SAS, and SSS) follow from the definition of congruence in terms of rigid motions.

Standard Identifier: 8.EE.1

Grade: 8
Domain: Expressions and Equations

Cluster:
Work with radicals and integer exponents.

Standard:
Know and apply the properties of integer exponents to generate equivalent numerical expressions. For example, 3^2 × 3^-5 = 3^-3 = 1/3^3 = 1/27.

Standard Identifier: 8.EE.2

Grade: 8
Domain: Expressions and Equations

Cluster:
Work with radicals and integer exponents.

Standard:
Use square root and cube root symbols to represent solutions to equations of the form x^2 = p and x^3 = p, where p is a positive rational number. Evaluate square roots of small perfect squares and cube roots of small perfect cubes. Know that √2 is irrational.

Standard Identifier: 8.EE.3

Grade: 8
Domain: Expressions and Equations

Cluster:
Work with radicals and integer exponents.

Standard:
Use numbers expressed in the form of a single digit times an integer power of 10 to estimate very large or very small quantities, and to express how many times as much one is than the other. For example, estimate the population of the United States as 3 × 10^8 and the population of the world as 7 × 10^9, and determine that the world population is more than 20 times larger.

Showing 41 - 50 of 98 Standards


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