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PROFESSIONAL COMMENTARY

Students use 1-inch square tiles and paper ruled into 1-inch squares to solve the problem of finding all possible ways to arrange five squares into shapes called pentominoes. The problem is motivated and clarified by looking first at dominoes (two squares), triominoes (three squares), and tetrominoes (four squares). Guiding questions, suggestions for assessment, and extensions of the lesson are included. (author/sw)

OHIO STANDARDS
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Mathematics Academic Content Standards
Geometry and Spatial Sense Standard
NATIONAL STANDARDS
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Principles and Standards for School Mathematics
Geometry Standard
RESOURCE TYPE
Instructional Resource
PRACTICE LEVEL
Promising Practice
STANDARDS ALIGNMENT
Grades 3–4
TOPICS
Mathematics --
Geometry;
Congruence, similarity;
Models, construction;
Spatial sense;
Problem Solving;
KEYWORDS
pentominoes
Publisher: Charles A. Dana Center, University of Texas at Austin