No Bending or Stretching

Student Summary

The transformations we’ve learned about so far, translations, rotations, reflections, and sequences of these motions, are all examples of rigid transformations. A rigid transformation is a move that doesn’t change measurements on any figure.

Earlier, we learned that a figure and its image have corresponding points. With a rigid transformation, figures like polygons also have corresponding sides and corresponding angles. These corresponding parts have the same measurements.

For example, triangle EFDEFD was made by reflecting triangle ABCABC across a horizontal line, then translating. Corresponding sides have the same lengths, and corresponding angles have the same measures.

Triangle A, B, C and its image after reflection and translation.

Measurements in triangle ABCABC Corresponding measurements in image EFDEFD
AB=2.24AB = 2.24 EF=2.24EF = 2.24
BC=2.83BC = 2.83 FD =2.83FD = 2.83
CA=3.00CA = 3.00 DE =3.00DE = 3.00
angle ABC=71.6ABC = 71.6^\circ angle EFD=71.6EFD= 71.6^\circ
angle BCA=45.0BCA = 45.0^\circ angle FDE=45.0FDE= 45.0^\circ
angle CAB=63.4CAB = 63.4^\circ angle DEF=63.4DEF= 63.4^\circ

Visual / Anchor Chart

Standards

Building On
4.MD.A

No additional information available.

Addressing
8.G.1.a

Verify experimentally the properties of rotations, reflections, and translations.

8.G.1.b

Verify experimentally the properties of rotations, reflections, and translations.