ChatterBank2 mins ago
maths homework - geometry
21 Answers
my son has been asked to calculate the volume and surface area of a triangular prism. The base is a right angled scalene triangle, the sides adjoining the right angle being 200cm and 50cm. The hypotenuse is not given. The prism is 300 centimetres long. He has calculated the volume as 200 x 50 x 300 divided by 2, which I think is correct. However, to calculate the surface area he needs the length of the hypotenuse, to calculate the area of the side of the rectangular side of the prism. He is absolutely adamant that he has not been taught Pythagorus, and therefore would not be expected to know it - I don't think he can do the calculation without it! Am I missing something?
Answers
Best Answer
No best answer has yet been selected by kags. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.I taught maths for 15 years.
Assuming that your son's school isn't tackling the syllabus in a very unorthodox manner (so that he could use trigonometry to help him find the length of the hypotenuse) the only method I can think of is scale drawing.
i.e. using a 1 to 10 scale, draw a right-angled triangle with (non-hypotenuse) sides of 20cm and 5cm. Measure the hypotenuse and then scale up to the 'real' measurement, by multiplying by 10.
If your son is of average ability (and hasn't yet covered Pythagoras), his maths teacher should be shot for setting such a lousy question. However, if your son is a high-flyer, his maths teacher is to be praised for creating a challenge for pupils.
Chris
Assuming that your son's school isn't tackling the syllabus in a very unorthodox manner (so that he could use trigonometry to help him find the length of the hypotenuse) the only method I can think of is scale drawing.
i.e. using a 1 to 10 scale, draw a right-angled triangle with (non-hypotenuse) sides of 20cm and 5cm. Measure the hypotenuse and then scale up to the 'real' measurement, by multiplying by 10.
If your son is of average ability (and hasn't yet covered Pythagoras), his maths teacher should be shot for setting such a lousy question. However, if your son is a high-flyer, his maths teacher is to be praised for creating a challenge for pupils.
Chris
He has been recognised as gifted and talented in Maths, so I believe the intention is not to use scale drawings but trigonometry. My own memory from school is that Pythagorus was taught very early on trigonometry, but it seems that he genuinely has not been taught it. He knows it now, as I have just explained it to him, but as with most children he only believes it if the teacher has told him! I am glad you agree that Pythagorus is necessary here!
I used to use the 3/4/5 rule to understand how to work out pythagorus. eg. draw a triangle with those sides and if the other two sides are 3 and 4 then the hypotenuse is 5 . SO ......3 squared =9 plus 4 squared = 16 add them together =25 ...square root of 25 is 5 . it's just a simple way of remembering how to do it. Hope this helps.
Well, I'm glad that we seem to have got there.
The simplest trigonometry approach is probably as follows:
Let the angle opposite the 50cm side be x
=> tan x = 50/200 = 0.25
=> x = 14.036 degrees (to 5 s.f).
We now have sin14.036� = 50/h, where h is the length of the hypotenuse.
=> h = 50/sin14.036� = 206.16 cm (to 5 s.f)
The simplest trigonometry approach is probably as follows:
Let the angle opposite the 50cm side be x
=> tan x = 50/200 = 0.25
=> x = 14.036 degrees (to 5 s.f).
We now have sin14.036� = 50/h, where h is the length of the hypotenuse.
=> h = 50/sin14.036� = 206.16 cm (to 5 s.f)
It may not have been part of the curriculum, but we watched a video where lots of happy children first constructed squares out of sheets of card on the shortest two sides of a right angled triangle, and then took these sheets to make one large square on the hypotenuse. (This is only 8 years ago).
Not until year 10? I hardly think so. I'm damn sure we were expected to know it for the Year 9 SATS, and probably for science as well as maths.
http://www.emaths.co.uk/sats/2007/68Paper2.pdf (see Q17 (c))
Not until year 10? I hardly think so. I'm damn sure we were expected to know it for the Year 9 SATS, and probably for science as well as maths.
http://www.emaths.co.uk/sats/2007/68Paper2.pdf (see Q17 (c))
Related Questions
Sorry, we can't find any related questions. Try using the search bar at the top of the page to search for some keywords, or choose a topic and submit your own question.