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Lesson plan Β· 45 min

Grade 7: Geometry

Learning objective

By the end of the lesson, Grade 7 students can work confidently with geometry, understanding not just how but why.

Curriculum links

Aligned to the Grade 7 maths curriculum. See the Common Core and Australian curriculum mappings.

1

Starter (do now)5 min

Warm up with a few quick geometry warm-ups on the board while the class settles, so every child starts thinking about the skill.

2

Teach it (I do)10 min

Pi links a circle's radius to its area and circumference through two formulas, and every prism's volume (rectangular, triangular, or a cylinder) is found the same way: the area of its cross-section multiplied by its length. Model the method clearly, thinking aloud:

  • Introduce pi (approximately 3.14) as a fixed number linking any circle's diameter to its circumference, before giving the formulas.
  • Teach circumference (2 x pi x radius) and area (pi x radius^2) as two separate formulas that both start from the radius.
  • Build volume from area first: a rectangular prism's volume is its base area times its height, which is just length x width x height.
  • Extend the same 'cross-section times length' idea to a cylinder, using the circle-area formula for the cross-section.
  • Keep radius (not diameter) as the value substituted into every formula, since mixing the two is the most common error.
3

Worked example

Work this through step by step on the board, then have the class talk you through a second one.

  • Find the area and volume of a cylinder with radius 4 and height 10
  • Circle area = 3.14 x 4 x 4 = 50.24 square units
  • Cylinder volume = 50.24 x 10 = 502.4 cubic units
4

Guided practice (we do)10 min

Do the first few questions of the practice worksheet together, one child explaining each step. Check for understanding before releasing the class to work alone.

5

Independent practice (you do)15 min

Students complete the practice worksheet independently while you circulate and support.

6

Misconceptions to watch

Circulate and look for these, they are the usual sticking points:

  • Substituting the diameter into a formula that needs the radius (or vice versa).
  • Forgetting to square the radius in the area formula (pi x radius^2, not pi x radius).
  • Treating volume as length x width x height even for shapes that are not rectangular prisms.
  • Mixing up area (square units) and volume (cubic units) when labelling an answer.
7

Plenary (review)5 min

Pull the class back together. Ask one child to explain geometry in their own words, pose a single check question everyone answers on a mini whiteboard, and name what you will build on next lesson.

8

Assessment

Use the independent worksheet as the evidence. A child who can complete it accurately and explain one answer has met the objective; anyone who cannot needs the easier level and a short reteach next session.

Worksheets for this lesson

Want more depth on the method? Read the full teaching guide.

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