Lesson 13

Using Equations to Solve for Unknown Angles

13.1: Is This Enough? (5 minutes)

Warm-up

In this activity, students consider whether there is enough information given to solve for the unknown angle measures. In previous lessons, students were given the measures of some angles in a figure and asked to solve for another. In this warm-up, the figure contains two unknowns and students are asked to critique Tyler’s thinking (MP3).

The discussion addresses the case in which angles \(a\) and \(b\) are equal to each other, in preparation for future activities in this lesson that have multiple unknown angles with the same measure. Monitor for students who agree and disagree with Tyler’s thinking, and ask them to share during the discussion.

Launch

Arrange students in groups of 2. Give students 1 minute of quiet think time followed by time to discuss their reasoning with their partner. Follow with a whole-class discussion.

Student Facing

Tyler thinks that this figure has enough information to figure out the values of \(a\) and \(b\).

Two rays on the same side of line l meet at the same point to form 3 angles, a, 90 degrees, b.

Do you agree? Explain your reasoning.

Student Response

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Anticipated Misconceptions

Some students may want to use tools from their geometry toolkits to measure the angles. Explain that the question is asking if they can solve the problem by only looking at the figure, not by measuring it.

Activity Synthesis

Poll the class on whether or not they agree with Tyler. Invite students to share their reasoning until they reach an agreement that Tyler is incorrect. 

Ask students to come up with an equation to represent the angle measures in the figure. (\(a+90+b=180\) or equivalent) Record their answers for all to see.

Display this image. Invite students to share how this figure is the same as the figure from the task and how it is different.

Straight angle, split into 3 angles.

If students do not mention any of these points, make sure to point them out:

  • Some things that are the same are the fact that there are still two angles with unknown measures and the measures of the three angles sum to 180 degrees. The two unknown angles are still complementary.
  • The main difference is that the two unknown angles have the same measure.
  • This figure can be represented with the equation \(a +90 + a = 180\) or equivalent.
  • Because both unknown angles have the same measure, we have enough information to know the value of \(a\).
  • \(a=45\)

13.2: What Does It Look Like? (15 minutes)

Activity

The purpose of this activity is for students to practice solving equations that represent relationships between angles, in preparation for the next activity where students will write such equations themselves.

The last three figures include right angles, but they are not marked (except that the task statement says to assume angles that look like right angles are right angles). This may come up in discussion after students have had time to work.

Launch

Tell students that each diagram has two possible equations, and their job is to choose the equation that best represents a relationship between angles in the diagram. Then, solve their chosen equation.

Keep students in the same groups. Give 5 minutes of quiet work time followed by time to discuss reasoning with a partner. Follow with a whole-class discussion.

Representation: Internalize Comprehension. Activate or supply background knowledge by asking students to start by labeling any angles they can find with their degree measure. Allow students to use calculators to ensure inclusive participation in the activity.
Supports accessibility for: Memory; Conceptual processing

Student Facing

Elena and Diego each wrote equations to represent these diagrams. For each diagram, decide which equation you agree with, and solve it. You can assume that angles that look like right angles are indeed right angles.

  1. Elena: \(x = 35\)

    Diego: \(x+35=180\)

    Two lines meet to form 4 angles, 35 degrees, x degrees, w degrees, blank.
  2. Elena: \(35+w+41=180\) 

    Diego: \(w+35=180\)

    Three adjacent angles form a straight angle, the angles are labeled 35 degrees, w degrees, 41 degrees.
  3. Elena: \(w + 35 = 90\)

    Diego: \(2w+35=90\)

    Two angles, w degrees and 35 degrees, appear to be complementary. Another angle, w degrees, is adjacent to the 35 degree angle.
  4. Elena: \(2w + 35 = 90\)

    Diego: \(w+35=90\)

    A right angle is split into three angles, w degrees, blank, w degrees. A 35 degree angle is formed by two rays outside the right angle and is vertical to the blank angle.
  5. Elena: \(w + 148 = 180\)

    Diego: \(x+90=148\)

    A set of rays form the angles, clockwise, 148 degrees, w, x, blank, blank, blank. 148 and w are supplementary, w and x are complementary, the next two blanks sum to 90 degrees.

Student Response

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Anticipated Misconceptions

If students struggle working with equations, encourage them to start with the diagram and label any angles they can figure out with their degree measure. The thinking necessary to figure out the measures of other angles may help them recognize a corresponding equation. Prompt students to recall what it looks like when an angle measures 90 degrees and what it looks like when an angle measures 180 degrees.

Activity Synthesis

Select students to share equations they agreed with and angle measures they found for each problem. As students share their explanations consider asking these questions:

  • “Where do you see the relationship expressed in the equation in the given figure? (and vice versa)”
  • “Did you and your partner agree on the equations and angle measures?”

For the last question, have students who used different equations to figure out the unknown angle measures share their explanations. Ask students:

  • “What angle relationship did you need to recognize to use Elena’s equation?” (That the angle with a measure of \(w\) degrees and the angle measuring 148 degrees were supplementary.)
  • “What angle relationship did you need to recognize to use Diego’s equation?” (That the angle measuring 148 degrees formed a vertical angle with the right angle and the angle measuring \(x\) degrees.)
  • “Does either method get us the same answer for both unknown angle measures?” (Yes.)

Explain to students that there might be multiple ways to get an answer because of the many angle relationships found in some figures. Encourage them to look for different methods in the next activity.

Speaking: MLR1 Stronger and Clearer Each Time. Use this routine to provide students with a structured opportunity to refine their explanations about whether or not they agree with Tyler. Give students time to meet with 2–3 partners, to share and get feedback on their responses. Provide prompts for feedback that will help students strengthen their ideas and clarify their language (e.g., “Can you give an example?”, “Why do you think…?”, “Can you say that another way?”, etc.). Give students 1–2 minutes to revise their writing based on the feedback they received.
Design Principle(s): Optimize output (for explanation)

13.3: Calculate the Measure (10 minutes)

Activity

This activity is a culmination of all the work students have done with angles in this unit. With less support than in previous activities, students come up with equations that represent the relationships between angles in a figure. Then, students solve their equation to find each unknown angle measure.

Launch

Encourage students to write an equation for each problem. Give students 2–3 minutes of quiet work time followed by a whole-class discussion.

Representation: Internalize Comprehension. Activate or supply background knowledge by asking students to start by looking for any vertical, complementary and supplementary angles. Allow students to use calculators to ensure inclusive participation in the activity.
Supports accessibility for: Memory; Conceptual processing

Student Facing

Find the unknown angle measures. Show your thinking. Organize it so it can be followed by others.

Two lines meet to form 4 angles.  One set of adjacent angles is labeled w degrees, 124 degrees.
Two rays on the same side of line l meet at point Q to form 3 angles, 52 degrees, b degrees, 23 degrees.

 

Lines \(\ell\) and \(m\) are perpendicular.

Two lines and a ray meet at the point where line m is perpendicular to line l.  Ask for additional assistance.
Two lines form vertical angles, one is labeled 120 degrees, the other is split by rays into three angles labeled m degrees, 66 degrees, m degrees.

 

Student Response

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Student Facing

Are you ready for more?

The diagram contains three squares. Three additional segments have been drawn that connect corners of the squares. We want to find the exact value of \(a+b+c\).

The diagram contains 3 squares. Segments connect the bottom left corner of the diagram to the top right corners the squares.  Please ask for additional assistance.
  1. Use a protractor to measure the three angles. Use your measurements to conjecture about the value of \(a+b+c\).
  2. Find the exact value of \(a+b+c\) by reasoning about the diagram.

Student Response

For access, consult one of our IM Certified Partners.

Anticipated Misconceptions

If students struggle to see the angle relationships in the figures, prompt them to look for any angles that are vertical, complementary, or supplementary to get them started.

Activity Synthesis

The goal of this discussion is for students to see different equations that can be used to represent and solve for the same unknown angle measures.

Select students to share their answers to each problem. Consider asking some of the following questions:

  • “Did anyone use a different equation for this same problem? If so, did you get the same answer?”
  • “Were any of the questions harder than others? Why?”
  • “Were there any questions you used a strategy that was new to you?”
Speaking: MLR8 Discussion Supports. When selected students share how they calculated the angle measurements, invite other students to challenge an idea, elaborate on an idea, or clarify the idea using improved mathematical language. Encourage students to demonstrate central concepts of the angle relationships (e.g., complementary, supplementary, vertical) multi-modally by explaining their reasoning using images of the angles as well as gestures. This will support student understanding about how to write equations that represent the relationships between angles in a figure.
Design Principle(s): Optimize output (for explanation); Support sense-making

Lesson Synthesis

Lesson Synthesis

  • How can equations help us solve for an unknown angle measure? (They allow us to represent relationships among angles. Then we can solve the equation to find the unknown angle measures.)
  • Is there only one way to solve for an unknown angle measure? (No, there are usually a few different equations that can be used, based on the relationships present in the figure.)

13.4: Cool-down - In Words (5 minutes)

Cool-Down

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Student Lesson Summary

Student Facing

To find an unknown angle measure, sometimes it is helpful to write and solve an equation that represents the situation. For example, suppose we want to know the value of \(x\) in this diagram.

Two lines meet to form 4 angles. An angle is labeled 144 degrees. It's vertical angle is split into 4 smaller angles, x degrees, x degrees, x degrees, 90 degrees.

Using what we know about vertical angles, we can write the equation \(3x + 90 = 144\) to represent this situation. Then we can solve the equation.

\(\begin{align} 3x + 90 &= 144 \\ 3x + 90 - 90 &= 144 - 90 \\ 3x &= 54 \\ 3x \boldcdot \frac13 &= 54 \boldcdot \frac13 \\ x &= 18 \end{align}\)