How to Construct an Angle Equal to a Given Angle: 3 Videos
Video 1: How to construct a copy of an angle
Video 2:
Video 3: Common mistakes made when constructing an angle as a copy of another
Video 1: How to construct a copy of an angle
Video 2:
Video 3: Common mistakes made when constructing an angle as a copy of another
Video 1: How to construct angles of a given measurement using paper and a protractor
Video 2: How to construct angles of a given measurement using a compass
Video 3: Examples of constructing angles of specific measurements
Video 4: Common mistakes made when constructing angles of specific measurements
To lay the foundation for understanding what trigonometry is and how it works, do this next activity.
An elaboration on some of the common misconceptions in dealing with Newton's Third Law. He also shows how to correctly and reliably identify Third Law force pairs.
Learn about Newton's third law of motion, which states that for every action there is an equal and opposite reaction. Look at multiple examples that illustrate this law, including pushing a block on ice, pushing against a desk, walking on sand, how rockets work, and how an astronaut could save themselves from drifting in space.
Video 1: Introduces the concepts of points, lines, rays and line segments
Video 2: Provides examples of points, lines, line segments and rays
Video 3: Common mistakes made
Video 1: What tools are required to construct geometrical shapes
Video 2: Examples of how geometrical construction tools can be used
Video 3: Common mistakes made when using geometrical construction tools
This video explores the different types of angles that exist.
This video explains what polygons are.