Friday, August 3, 2012

Points, Lines and Planes

Did this one a few weeks ago with my geometry kids.  Nothing super fancy, but just a little chart to get down the definitions of points, lines, planes and the relationships between them.  These were on two separate ISN right side pages.

This was on the first page.


It flips open to some more info underneath.


The next day we did this page. The inside has the relationships between lines and plans and info about their intersections.  The outside defines and gives examples of collinear and coplanar points.

Get the files here:

17 comments:

  1. Sarah, Thanks to Pinterest, I found your blog and several others. What inspiration! I really like this idea of ISN, had not heard of it until this summer, so please allow me a moment of ignorance and help me understand how this is different from having the students draw these charts in their notebooks? Is there "something" about putting the information on a chart and inserting that chart into the notebook or is it simply that the students organize the information in a chart? Again, just totally new to the ISN concept and super excited about integrating into my classroom this year. Thanks!

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  2. Aw I'm glad you found your way over here! This chart may not be the best example of what makes the interactive student notebook different, but we also put a lot of things like foldables, flash cards, packets and things of that nature that would easily get torn out of a three ring binder. I use the ISN so that everything is super organized and will last.

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  3. I'm in love with the graphic organizer you used for all of this. I'm definitely stealing it. Thanks for sharing!

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  4. Sarah,
    I'm having a problem downloading your forms from Scribd. Any suggestions?

    thanks,
    Sarah

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    1. Oh no really? It seems to be working ok for me. All of the files are saved as pdfs so I think that you need to have adobe reader (which is free)..any chance that could be it?

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  5. This is exactly what I was looking for!! Thanks!

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  6. I am curious what type of output page you used for this. Was it a practice worksheet of some kind. Thanks!

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    1. Yes the left side was just a worksheet, not all something fabulous. It was just a textbook practice sheet that went along with that section.

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  7. Hello Sarah! I feel technologically challenged! I tried to open this at school and I cannot! Do you have it elsewhere? Thanks so much! You truly are an inspiration!

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    1. Maybe try on a different computer, sometimes school networks have file sharing sites blocked

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  8. This is EXACTLY what I'm looking for!! Could you please tell me where I can find the template for the chart?

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  9. Awesome! I never saw the relationship foldable. I already use your points lines and planes chart, and even made chart for segments, endpoints,and rays thanks to your awesome ideas and activities. Thank you !!!

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  10. Thank you! This first year teacher is very appreciative!

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  11. This is my third year teaching Geometry and I still use this resource. Thank you!!!

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  12. This is awesome! I'm so excited to flip my classroom more this year. I am having trouble viewing the powerpoint; do I need to make a box account to view?

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