Quadrilateral Properties w/ Card Sort

Monday, March 27, 2017
I changed it up this year and introduced these pages before my quadrilaterals flip-book (you can find in previous post ). I had students tape down properties of parallelograms, rectangles, rhombi, and squares on the left side of their notebook and had them tape down properties of trapezoids on the right side.

I told students, every day that we go through the different types of quadrilaterals, I want you to reference this page and write down key information that will help you remember. This will be your own personal "quadrilaterals cheat sheet" and its sole purpose is to help you come up with your own way to remember the properties.

After the unit was done, I glanced through students notebook and wrote down the most common notes. The pictures below are what most of my students ended up writing down in their INB. I did not provide students with any information to write down. 









After students taped down the blank properties in their INB, I had students complete a quadrilateral card sort. I told students to sort the cards and write down a short paragraph on why they chose to sort their cards that way. 




The following are the 3 most popular categories that students chose to sort their cards.

Popular Category #1: 5 different groups

Group 1: Angles on cards J, F, P, G, H, and C are all congruent.





Group 2: Angles on cards N and L are supplementary.



Group 3: On card A, only half of the diagonals marked.


Group 4: On cards I, D, O, and M, the angles marked are supposed to represent ninety degrees.


Group 5: On cards E, K, and B, the diagonals are congruent.



Popular Category #2: 2 different groups based on angles and diagonals

Group 1: On cards C, D, F, G, H, I, J, L, M, N, O, and P, angles are marked in the picture.



Group 2: On cards A, B, K, and E, diagonals are marked or given in the picture. 



Popular Category #3: 2 different groups

Group 1: 
Students placed these cards in the same group because they are all part of the parallelogram "family."




Group 2: 
Students placed these cards in the same group because they have their own family since they do not have two pairs of parallel sides. 



This was my first card sort activity where I allowed students to choose how they wanted to sort the cards. Definitely going to be making more card sorts like these in the future!

Here are the files that I used if you would like to use!





7 comments

  1. Katrina, would you be willing to share the card sort with the (pretty!) quadrilateral diagrams that you shared pictures of in this post?!

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  2. I love this explore activity. Could you please post the quadrilateral sort cards? The last post is of description sort cards. Thanks!

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  3. What about taking your card sort and adding thinking maps? And using different thinking maps with different groups...

    http://mathequalslove.blogspot.com/2017/05/dry-erase-venn-diagram-using-guess-my.html?m=1

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  4. Hi Katrina! I noticed that on the Properties of Squares page, on the bottom, it says "Includes the 2 properties from rectangles". However, those two properties are not listed. You have accidentally re-listed the three properties of Rhombi. Is there any way this can be corrected? Thank you so much!

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  5. Just wanted to let you know that there are definitely some errors on n the rectangle, rhombus, and square foldable. It says there are parallel angles instead of sides and the properties of a rectangle are actually the properties of a rhombus on the square paper.

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