R9 G8 Q3 Module 1 Final
R9 G8 Q3 Module 1 Final
R9 G8 Q3 Module 1 Final
Department of Education
Regional Office IX, Zamboanga Peninsula
Mathematics
Quarter 3 - Module 1:
Mathematical System
What I Know
Directions: Find out how much you already know about this module. Choose the letter
that you think best answers the question. Write your answer on the space provided.
Take note of the items that you were not able to answer correctly and find the answer as
you go through this module.
1
b. If two points lie in a plane, then the line containing those points lies in the
plane.
c. Through any two points there is exactly one line.
d. If two figures are congruent, then they have the same area.
____10. Which statement best describes a mathematical system?
a. It is composed of undefined terms, defined terms, definitions, postulates and
theorems.
b. It is essential in dealing with real life problems.
c. It is a logical way of solving a certain thing.
d. It has three parts which are vocabulary, geometric shapes and principles.
What’s In
Activity 1: What’s the Conclusion?!
Directions: Draw a conclusion from each given situation and underline the reasoning
being used.
1. 2, 4, 6, 8. The next number is ______. (inductive, deductive)
2. Collinear points are points on the same line. Points J, D, S and M are collinear.
Therefore, _______________________________________________________. (inductive, deductive)
3. Regular polygon is equilateral. ARDYL is a regular pentagon.
Therefore, ________________________________________________________. (inductive, deductive)
4. A child’s teacher in pre-school was a female, in his grades 1 and 2 his teachers were
both female. The child may say____________________________________. (inductive, deductive)
5. Filipinos are hospitable. Mark is a Filipino.
Therefore, __________________________________________________. (inductive, deductive)
Excellent! Learning the types of reasoning is essential in proving statements. Let’s now
proceed with the next lesson which is also essential in proving mathematical statements.
What’s New
Jonathan Pope, Canada Line Skytrain Jocarra, STOCK - Starry Milky Way 2, Freepik, Rubber fig in a gray room,
Bridge from Fraser River North Arm, creativecommons.org. CC BY 3.0 www.freepik.com. Freepik License
Richmond, commons.wikimedia.org.
Creative Commons Attribution 2.0
Generic
2
Activity 2: Picture Analysis
Directions: Answer the following questions based on the given pictures.
1. What are the things being shown in the pictures?
_________________________________________________________________________
_________________________________________________________________________
2. What are the geometric terms they represent?
_________________________________________________________________________
_________________________________________________________________________
3. Are their features similar?
_________________________________________________________________________
_________________________________________________________________________
4. Can we use these terms to define other geometric terms?
_________________________________________________________________________
_________________________________________________________________________
5. Look for any geometric term being defined by using these basic terms.
_________________________________________________________________________
_________________________________________________________________________
What is it
Think about the sequence of the following statements below.
What is a triangle?
A triangle is a polygon with three sides.
What is a polygon?
A polygon is a closed figure composed of line segments
What is a line segment?
A line segment is the part of a line between two endpoints and including the
endpoints.
What is line?
Line is a figure extending infinitely in both directions and having no thickness nor
width.
Notice that in the above sequence of statements, a triangle was defined in terms of
a polygon, a polygon in terms of line segment and line segment in terms of a line. Line,
triangle, polygon and line segment are parts of a mathematical system.
Axioms or postulates
principles
Theorems
Undefined terms
Undefined terms are terms that are left undefined in the system. Instead of
providing a definition for them, we resort to a description, illustration or demonstration.
The undefined terms are point, line and plane.
Point
A point is the basic unit of geometry. It has no dimension (length, width or thickness),
even though we represent a point with a dot. It is named using capital letters.
The points below are name point E and point G.
E G
H L
Line
A line is a series of points that extends without end in two directions. It has no
thickness but its length extends in one dimension and goes on forever in both directions.
S Y
n
The line above can be named as:
Line SY, Line YS, or Line n
´
The symbol for line SY is SY
Points that lie on the same line are called collinear.
K L
B
4
A D
Plane
C H
N
Defined Terms
Defined terms are terms defined using undefined terms and other defined terms.
Examples:
A line segment is a part of a line between two endpoints and including the
endpoints. (Line segment is defined using the undefined term “line”)
Ray is a part of a line that has a fixed starting point but no end point. It can
extend infinitely in one direction. (Ray is defined using the undefined terms “line” and
“point”)
Definitions are statements that distinguish one term from all other terms.
Example: Triangle is a with three-sided polygon.
Example:
5
Definition: A midpoint of a segment is defined as a point M that divides a segment into
two segments of equal length. How can we prove that a point M is the midpoint of the
segment?
We must appeal to the reverse of the definition of a midpoint. A point that divides a
segment into two segments of equal length is the midpoint of the segment. In other
words, we must show that AM MB.
Once that is accomplished, we can then conclude that point M is the midpoint of
segment AB.
Definition: An angle is the figure formed by two rays sharing a common endpoint.
Reverse: The figure formed by two rays sharing a common endpoint is a called
angle.
Postulates
Postulates are statements that are considered true without proof or validation.
These statements help us to state simple facts; in this case referring to lines. Postulates
help us draw conclusions about complex problems. Sometimes they describe
relationships between geometric figures.
Examples:
Postulate 1: A line contains at least two points.
Postulate 2: A plane contains at least three noncollinear points.
Postulate 3: Through any two points, there is exactly one line.
Postulate 4: Through any three noncollinear points, there is exactly one plane.
Postulate 5: If two points lie in a plane, then the line joining them lies in that plane.
Postulate 6: If two planes intersect, then their intersection is a line.
Theorem
Theorems are statements proven to be true using postulates, definitions, other
established theorems and logic.
Examples:
Theorem 1: If two lines intersect, then they intersect in exactly one point.
Theorem 2: If a point lies outside a line, then exactly one plane contains both the line
and the point.
Theorem 3: If two lines intersect, then exactly one plane contains both lines.
What’s More
Activity 3: Find Me!
Directions: Read the statements carefully. Identify whether the given statement is a
postulate or a theorem. Encircle the undefined terms and underline the defined terms
of each statements.
Example:
Theorem: Vertical angles are congruent.
6
_______ 1. If three sides of one triangle are equal in measure to the corresponding sides
of another triangle, then the triangles are congruent.
_______ 2. Through any three non-collinear points there is exactly one plane containing
them.
_______ 3. The sum of the measure of the angles of a triangle is 180°.
_______ 4. If two sides of a triangle are not congruent, then the larger angle is opposite
the longer side.
_______ 5. If two angles in a triangle are equal, then the triangle is isosceles.
____________1. The edge where your classroom wall and ceiling meet is a representation
of a line.
____________2. Two points are contained in exactly one line.
____________3. The heads of the nails on the windows look like dots when you’re looking
at a distance.
____________4. A line segment is a subset of a line.
____________5. If two parallel lines are cut by a transversal, then the alternate interior
angles are congruent.
What I Can Do
Activity 4: Arrange Me!
Directions: Arrange the sequence of the statements starting from the theorem up to the
description of the undefined terms. Write the statements inside the box.
7
A linear pair is two adjacent angles whose non-common sides form opposite
rays.
If two angles form a linear pair, then they are supplementary.
An angle is the figure formed by two rays sharing a common endpoint.
Line is a figure extending infinitely in both directions and having no thickness
nor width.
Ray is a part of a line that has a fixed starting point but no end point.
Theorem
Definition
Definition
Definition
Description of the
undefined term
Assessment
Directions: Read the questions carefully. Write only the letter of the correct answer on
the space provided.
Additional Activities
Activity 6: Let’s Create!
Directions: Create a poem with at least two stanzas about mathematical system.
Write the poem inside the box.
Rubrics:
9
Organization The sequencing The sequencing The sequencing The sequencing
of words and of words and of words and of words and
phrases is phrases is phrases is very phrases is
logical, and the somewhat confusing, and random. The
reader is able to logical, and the the reader may reader can find
follow the order reader is able to need to use his no evidence of
of ides clearly. follow the or her own thoughtful
ordering of knowledge to ordering of
ideas with determine the ideas.
minimal effort. ordering of
knowledge.
Word choice The poem uses The poem uses The poem uses
The poem uses
and main idea many precise, several general or general or
vivid., and descriptive ordinary terms
ordinary terms
descriptive words to to develop ato describe the
words to develop a main main idea orobject; the
develop a main idea or message. words do not
idea or message. develop a main
message. idea or
message.
Spelling There are no or There are Numerous Numerous
very few spelling errors, spelling errors spelling errors
spelling errors. which may or impede the impede the
They are may not be reader from reader from
developmentally developmentally understanding understanding
appropriate and appropriate. the poem’s the poem’s
do not impede However, they message. Some message.
the reader’s do not impede of the errors are Errors are not
understanding the reader’s developmentally developmentally
of the poem. understanding appropriate, appropriate and
of the poem. but others should have
should have been noticed
been noticed and corrected.
and corrected.
References
Christopher S. Baird. “Laser beam of light” Accessed November 25, 2020.
www.publicdomainpictures.net
Deviant Art. “STOCK - Starry Milky Way 2” Accessed November 25, 2020.
Creativecommons.org
Freepik. “Rubber fig in a gray room” Accessed November 26, 2020. www.freepik.com
Pixy Org. “Tip of a pencil, Macro” Accessed November 25, 2020. pixy.org
10
PublicDomainPictures.net. “Dance Floor” Accessed November 25, 2020.
www.publicdomainpictures.net
Wikimedia Commons. “Canada Line Skytrain Bridge from Fraser River North Arm,
Richmond” Accessed November 25, 2020. commons.wikimedia.org.
Development Team
Writer: Ressme M. Bulay-og
Kabasalan National High School
Illustrator:
Layout Artist:
Management Evelyn F. Importante
Team: OIC-CID Chief EPS
Jerry c. Bokingkito
OIC-Assistant SDS
11