Polygon Hunting

Find all the different polygons that can be drawn by joining dots

Paint
Paint
Paint
Paint
Paint
Paint
Undo Clear
Camera

Investigate the properties of the polygons you find.

Suggested

How Many Squares? 2

How Many Squares? 2

A printable grid containing many copies of the design used in the second shape counting Starter.

The short web address is:

www.transum.org/go/?to=manysquares2

Related

Areas of Composite Shapes

Areas of Composite Shapes

Find the areas of combined (composite) shapes made up of one or more simple polygons and circles.

The short web address is:

www.transum.org/go/?to=areacomposite

Similar Activity

Areas Investigation

Areas Investigation

Investigate polygons with an area of 4 sq. units. Investigate polygons with other areas.

The short web address is:

www.transum.org/go/?num=79

Solutions for this and other Transum puzzles, exercises and activities are available here when you are signed in to your Transum subscription account. If you do not yet have an account and you are a teacher, tutor or parent you can apply for one by completing the form on the Sign Up page.

A Transum subscription also gives you access to the 'Class Admin' student management system, downloadable worksheets, many more teaching resources and opens up ad-free access to the Transum website for you and your pupils.

This activity is based on an article Polygon Hunting: Extending the Field by W. A. Ewbank in the publication Mathematics in School, Vol. 13, No. 5 (Nov., 1984), pp. 28-29 Published by: The Mathematical Association.

Investigations Home

Do you have any comments? It is always useful to receive feedback and helps make this free resource even more useful for those learning Mathematics anywhere in the world. Click here to enter your comments.

A mathematical investigation is quite different to other mathematical activities. The best investigations are open ended and allow students to choose the way they work and how they record their findings. It is one of the few occasions when 'going off on a tangent' is not only acceptable but actively encouraged (within reason).

Students may ask for 'the answers' but this supposes that the activity is closed. Investigations can always be extended by varying the initial instructions or asking the question 'what if...?'. Sometimes students point out that the instructions are ambiguous and can be interpreted in different ways. This is fine and the students are encouraged to explain how they interpreted the instructions in their report.

Some students may benefit from a writing frame when producing the reports of their investigations. Teachers may suggest sections or headings such as Introduction, Interpretation, Research, Working and Conclusion or something similar.

Here are some other activities you may be interested in:

Featured Activity

Four Colour Theorem

Four Colour Theorem

This mathematical activity involves colouring in! That makes a change. Using the paint bucket tool can you flood fill the regions so that no two adjacent regions are the same colour?

Recently Updated

Angle Parallels

Angle Parallels

Understand and use the relationship between parallel lines and alternate and corresponding angles. So far this activity has been accessed 58842 times and 40283 Transum Trophies have been awarded for completing it.

Apple

©1997-2024 WWW.TRANSUM.ORG