
I generalized this with more letters and got the secret numbers (A, B & C) in terms of the sides (x, y & z). My brain works much better with manipulation, variables and algebra. I could make these statements, prove it with some numbers and I would be satisfied with this.

My boyfriend actually walked by and took a look at it, when I explained it with numbers he was so confused. This led me to my written work, justifying the equations I had previously come up with.

I was even more satisfied with this answer. Again, my brain was ready to just accept the equations, simply because I believed in my own mathematical ability. Once I actually explained it, the equations were completely correct and I could justify them.
Next I tried to move on to one of the more complicated shapes given in the problem set. I made variables and equations and tried to go about manipulating like I did the first time.

I figured I would focus on one shape at a time. The first one I tried to tackle was the parallelogram shaped-thing on the top right. I couldn't do anything with the equations! Every time I subbed something in it ended in a roundabout where the magic number part would algebraically disappear. I plan on giving this some time and revisiting. Any one else have some thoughts on how to start?


It looks like we have about the same 'formula' for a triangle, but does that apply for square's and hexagons using opposite and adjacent terminology? I found it to be slightly different with larger polygons.
ReplyDeleteI never tried the figure you did, (I did the other one and seemed to work). However they problem said that maybe using multiplication might work? I don't remember.
Excellent work, and very nicely illustrated and explained.
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