Learning Resources LER 7630 Musical Toy Instrument User Manual


 
Ask students how they might organize the shapes into categories based on their
features. Write students’ answers on the board. Then, define pyramids and
prisms. Hold up an example of a prism and a pyramid for the class. Encourage
students to organize the Power Solids again based on this information. Discuss
and explain the cylinder, sphere, and cone as exceptions.
Work with students to create a table like this one to record their observations.
Show students a cardboard box. Ask if the box is a prism or a pyramid. (prism)
Have a student volunteer identify the box’s bases, faces, edges, and vertices.
Have another student do the same for an oatmeal container. You may need to
cut the container to make identification easier.
This would be a good time for your students to make constructions of the
various models. You can construct models of toothpicks and gumdrops, straws
and yarn, or pipe cleaners. As you go through formulas, encourage students to
refer to their models to visualize why the formulas work.
4
Power Solids
Number of
Bases
Shape of
Base(s)
Number of
Faces
Number of
Edges
Number of
Vertices
Large Square Prism
Small Rectangular
Prism
Large Rectangular
Prism
Hexagonal Prism
Triangular Prism
Square Pyramid
Triangular Pyramid
Sphere
Cylinder
Cone