Isosceles and Equilateral Triangles Videos - Free Educational Videos for Students in K - 12

Array

Lumos Video Store

This page provides a list of educational videos related to Isosceles and Equilateral Triangles. You can also use this page to find sample questions, apps, worksheets, lessons , infographics and presentations related to Isosceles and Equilateral Triangles.


Learn Equilateral, Scalene & Isosceles Triangles and Acute, Obtuse & Right Triangles - [15]


By Math and Science

Quality Math And Science Videos that feature step-by-step example problems!

Triangles


By MathPlanetVideos

Find out whether the triangles are right, isosceles, acute, scalene, obtuse or equilateral

Find missing angles of triangles


By Khan Academy

Three example problems involving isosceles and equilateral triangles (partly taken from Art of Problem Solving, by Richard Rusczyk).

Recognizing triangle types


By Khan Academy

Scalene, isosceles, equilateral, acute, right, obtuse. All are types of triangles but what makes them special depends on the method of categorization. Watch this outstanding explanation.

Equilateral Triangles


By yourteachermathhelp

In this lesson students learn to classify triangles as scalene (all sides have different lengths) isosceles (at least two sides have the same length) or equilateral (all sides have the same length). Students also learn that the sum of the lengths of any two sides of a triangle must be greater than the length of the third side.

Triangles and Triangle Shapes - a Quick Kindergarten Online Learning Lesson - The Montessori Way


By Learn And Play Montessori School

Triangles are a key shape and geometry is a key pre-STEM skill for our Kindergarten children. Check out our fun video, and help your child stay learning.

3rd Grade Math Rap


By McCarthy Math Academy

With a little help from the group, Mindless Behavior, I have created a math video with lyrics to help my students to understand and apply core math skills for third grade. People of all ages can jam out to this one. Enjoy!

I've got a case of the operation blues.
Because I don't know which one I should use.
Look at the word problem for the clues.
The key words tell you how to choose.

Each means you multiply or you must divide.
Tryna find the total? Then you multiply
Total's in the problem? Then you must divide.
Not quick to solve it, draw it, get it right.

Addition's easy for me and you
Sum, In all, together, and total too.
When do you subtract? How many more?
Fewer? Left? Less? Difference in a score?

Place value's next. Disco on the " dess "
Ones, tens, hundreds, to the left
Thousands, Ten thousands, hundred...thousand
Say the name of the place, yeah.

The value's the amount of the place
For example, 2,060.
The value of the 2 is 2-0-0-0,
The value of the 6 is 6-0.

When you round, find and underline the place
Spotlight to the right, decide the digit's fate
5 or more, add 1 to the rounding place
4 or less, do nothing but walk away, (estimate)

A pen, penny is one, one cent
A Nic-kel is five, a dime is ten cents
25 for a quarter, George Washington
100 cents makes a dollar, there he goes again.

For pictographs, you gotta check out the key
One smiley face might really equal three
For bar graphs, pay attention to the scale
Think it's counting by ones, huh, you'll fail

Fractions are easy, just draw your best.
Here they go from least to greatest
1/12, 1/6, ¼, 1/3,
½, 2/3, ¾, Fraction nerd!

You see that number on top,
That's called the numerator
It describes the amount
That is being considered
And if you jump down from the fraction bar
Denominator
It's the total number of equal parts.

Let me give you an example:
Leslie Moin has some coins
A total of 9
2 happen to be pennies
While 7 are dimes.
What's the fraction of dimes?
How many coins? 9
How many dimes? 7
Say the fraction -- seven ninths

Length times width is Area
Distance around is Perimeter
Break down the GEOMETRY

3 sides makes triangle
4 sides = quadrilateral
5 pentagon, 6 hexagon
8 octagon, 10 decagon

Lines that never cross - PARALLEL
Lines that meet or cross - INTERSECTING
Lines that form right angles -- PERPENDICULAR

Same shape, same size -- CONGRUENT
Line that cuts in half - SYMMETRY
Up and Down - VERTICAL
Left to Right -- HORIZONTAL

An angle less than right - ACUTE
An angle opened wide - OBTUSE
Ninety degrees square corner - RIGHT ANGLE

Back to triangles
3 sides the same = equilateral
2 sides the same = isosceles
no sides the same = Hey, that's a scalene right!

So, that's it.
That's our math song.
Before we leave,
Remember to read
Your math problems three times before you answer.
That way you know what the problem
Is asking you to do.
Don't be lazy, be brilliant.
Piece! Like a fraction.