Two-dimensional Shapes>Generalizing Orientation and Congruence in Transformations on a Coordinate Plane(TEKS.Math.8.10.A)

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Texas 8th Grade Math › Two-dimensional Shapes>Generalizing Orientation and Congruence in Transformations on a Coordinate Plane(TEKS.Math.8.10.A)

Questions 1 - 5
1

Consider these examples: a hexagon is rotated $90^\circ$ clockwise; a triangle is slid 4 units right; a square is reflected across the $x$-axis; and a star is dilated by a factor of 2. Which transformations preserve orientation?

Reflections and translations

Rotations and translations

Reflections and dilations

Reflections only

Explanation

Orientation means the order/direction of the vertices (clockwise vs. counterclockwise) stays the same. Rotations and translations keep the figure facing the same way, so they preserve orientation (and congruence). Reflections flip the figure, reversing orientation (though they keep congruence). Dilations keep orientation but change size, so they do not preserve congruence unless the scale factor is 1.

2

Which transformations preserve congruence (same size and shape)? For example, think about a triangle rotated $180^\circ$, a square slid left, a pentagon reflected across the $y$-axis, and a hexagon dilated by factor 2.

Dilations only

Reflections only

Rotations and dilations

Rotations, translations, and reflections

Explanation

Congruence means same size and shape. The rigid motions—rotations, translations, and reflections—preserve congruence. Dilations change size (unless the scale factor is 1), so they do not preserve congruence.

3

Which option shows a transformation that preserves both orientation and congruence?

A triangle is rotated $180^\circ$ about the origin.

A parallelogram is reflected across the $y$-axis.

A square is dilated by scale factor $\tfrac{1}{2}$.

A pentagon is dilated by factor 3.

Explanation

Rotations and translations preserve both orientation (the figure's facing direction) and congruence (same size and shape). Reflections preserve congruence but reverse orientation. Dilations preserve orientation but change size, so they do not preserve congruence unless the scale factor is 1.

4

Which transformation reverses orientation but keeps the figure congruent?

A figure is translated 6 units down.

A figure is rotated $270^\circ$ counterclockwise.

A figure is reflected across the $x$-axis.

A figure is dilated by a factor of 3.

Explanation

Reflections flip the figure, reversing orientation (clockwise vs. counterclockwise order of vertices), but they are rigid motions, so they preserve congruence. Rotations and translations preserve both orientation and congruence. Dilations preserve orientation but change size, so they do not preserve congruence unless the scale factor is 1.

5

Which transformations do not preserve congruence?

Rotations and translations

Dilations with scale factor not equal to 1

Rotations, translations, and reflections

Reflections only

Explanation

Dilations change size, so they do not preserve congruence unless the scale factor is 1. Rotations and translations preserve both orientation and congruence. Reflections preserve congruence but reverse orientation.