Describe and represent shape, location, and movement by applying geometric properties and spatial relationships in order to navigate the world around them.
Each student/pair will begin with 60 tiles or the Pentomino Jamboard (virtual).
Explain to the class that a pentomino is a geometric shape made by joining five equal squares edge to edge.
Ask your class: “Using sets of five tiles, how many unique pentomino configurations can you build?”
Explain that any rotation of the shape is a version of the same pentomino. Tell the students we will revisit this idea once we’ve had an opportunity to start creating pentomino shapes.
Explain that the configurations must join edge to edge, rather than at the vertices.
Let the students begin creating pentominoes, and after two minutes, do a quick check-in to make sure they all understand the activity. At this point, show an example of a pentomino and use it to demonstrate that different flips and rotations remain the same pentomino.
Now it’s time for the challenge. Provide students with ample time to create as many configurations as possible using their 60 tiles.
There will be much discussion between students. Listen to their conversations and provide support when needed.
Ask the students to discuss how many pentominoes they think there are. When appropriate, reveal that there are 12 possible pentomino shapes. Show them what those look like.
There are bonus challenges in the slides and in the Extensions section of this document.
The Pentomino Challenge Google Slides file has instructions in the presenters notes. The slideshow will be useful for both in-class and online instruction. An image of all the solutions can be found toward the end of the document.
Look Fors
Can students accurately configure different pentominoes (e.g., Using five tiles, aligning the tiles side by side)?
What spatial language are students using? Is it being communicated correctly?
Can students identify duplicate pentominoes that have different orientations?
Extension
Ask the students to try to come up with the letter codes of each pentomino (the letters of the alphabet that each shape resembles).
Challenge students to configure all 12 pentominoes into one big rectangle (See possible solutions in Pentomino Challenge PowerPoint).
Find the area and perimeter of each pentomino? What do students notice about the area?
Which pentominoes have rotational symmetry? Which pentominoes have reflection symmetry?