1 / 22

WARM-UP

WARM-UP. Rewrite each of the following statements in “If-then” form as the conditional, and converse . then write a biconditional and determine if it is . is true or false. 2. Vietnamese New Years is on January 3. 3. AB+BC=AC, B is between AC. CAHSEE prep.

blake-noble
Download Presentation

WARM-UP

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. WARM-UP Rewrite each of the following statements in “If-then” form as the conditional, and converse. then write a biconditional and determine if it is . is true or false. 2. Vietnamese New Years is on January 3. 3. AB+BC=AC, B is between AC

  2. CAHSEE prep

  3. Proving Statements About segments What is the difference between congruence and equality?

  4. Building a Proof • When writing a proof, you can only use facts that have previously been proved (theorems), facts that are assumed true without proof (postulates), and definitions. • Proofs can be written in paragraph form or in a two-column form. • We will use two-column form most often.

  5. Two-Column Proofs: Key Elements • Given: state the “given” facts • Diagram: a figure that shows what is given • Prove: a statement of what you have to prove • Statements: (Left Column) numbered logical statements that lead to your conclusion • Reasons: (Right Column) numbered reasons that justify your statements (definitions, postulates, properties of algebra/congruence, previously proven theorems)

  6. Properties of Equality (review) • These two properties are often interchangeable: • Substitution Prop. of Equality: If a=b, then we can substitute (plug in) a for b, or b for a. • If x+a=c AND a=b, then x+b=c (Plug it in, plug it in!) • Transitive Prop. of Equality: If a=b & b=c, then a=c. • If Mr. Madden is the same height as Simon, and Simon is the same height a Bradley, then Mr. Madden and Bradley are the same height. =)

  7. Properties of Equality (review cont.) • Mirror, mirror, on the wall… • Reflexive Prop. of Equality: a=a • Anything is equal to itself (Think about your reflection in the mirror!) • Symmetric Property of Equality: If a=b, then b=a. • Think about something symmetrical… if you flip it, it still looks the same. You can always flip an equation, Left to Right. (Flip it good!)

  8. Properties of Congruence • These 3 properties work for congruence also: • Reflexive: For any segment AB, AB ≅ AB. • Symmetric: If AB ≅ CD, then CD ≅ AB. • Transitive: If AB ≅ CD & CD ≅ EF, then AB ≅ EF.

  9. Given: AB = BC, C is the midpoint of BD Prove: AB = CD • AB = BC, • C is the midpoint of BD • Given • Def. Midpoint • BC = CD • AB = CD • Substitution

  10. Given: AB=CD Prove: AC=BD AB=CD Given AB+BC=AC Segment Add. Post. Segment Add. Post. BC+CD=BD BC+AB=BD Substitution AC=BD Substitution

  11. Given: AC=BD Prove: AB=CD AC=BD Given AB+BC=AC Segment Add. Post. Segment Add. Post. BC+CD=BD AB+BC = BC+CD Substitution AB=CD Subtr. Prop of =

  12. Given: QR = RS Prove: QS = 2 RS

  13. Given:LE = RM, EG = AR Prove: LG = MA LE = RM and EG = AR Given AR+RM=AM Segment addition LE+EG=LG Segment addition RM+AR=LG Substitution LG = MA Substitution

  14. Example 5: Using Segment Relationships • In the diagram, Q is the midpoint of PR. Show that PQ and QR are equal to ½ PR. • GIVEN: Q is the midpoint of PR. • PROVE: PQ = ½ PR and QR = ½ PR.

  15. Q is the midpoint of PR. PQ = QR PQ + QR = PR PQ + PQ = PR 2 ∙ PQ = PR PQ = ½ PR QR = ½ PR Given Definition of a midpoint Segment Addition Postulate Substitution Property Distributive property Division property Substitution Statements: Reasons:

  16. (over Lesson 2-2) 1-1a Write using two column proofs! Slide 1 of 1

  17. (over Lesson 2-2) 1-1b Slide 1 of 1

  18. Example 2: Using Congruence • Use the diagram and the given information to complete the missing steps and reasons in the proof. • GIVEN: LK = 5, JK = 5, JK≅ JL • PROVE: LK ≅ JL

  19. ________________ ________________ LK = JK LK ≅ JK JK ≅ JL ________________ Given Given Substitution _________________ Given Substitution Statements: Reasons:

  20. LK = 5 JK = 5 LK = JK LK ≅ JK JK ≅ JL LK ≅ JL Given Given Substitution Def. Congruent seg. Given Substitution Statements: Reasons:

  21. Def. of congruent segments AB = BC DE = EF Substitution (or Transitive) Substitution (or Transitive) Def. of congruent segments

More Related