Cube creations
This is a level 4 geometry strand activity from the Figure It Out series. It is focused on drawing three-dimensional shapes on isometric paper and making three-dimensional shapes from two-dimensional pictures. A PDF of the student activity is included.
About this resource
Figure It Out is a series of 80 books published between 1999 and 2009 to support teaching and learning in New Zealand classrooms.
This resource provides the teachers’ notes and answers for one activity from the Figure It Out series. A printable PDF of the student activity can be downloaded from materials that come with this resource.
Specific learning outcomes:
- Draw three dimensional shapes on isometric paper.
- Make three dimensional shapes from two dimensional pictures.
Cube creations
Achievement Objectives
GM4-6: Relate three-dimensional models to two-dimensional representations, and vice versa.
Required materials
- Figure It Out, Levels 3–4, Geometry, "Cube creations", page 13
- multilink cubes
- classmate
- isometric paper (Isometric paper CM.pdf)
See Materials that come with this resource to download:
- Cube creations activity (.pdf)
- Isometric paper CM (.pdf)
Activity
This practical activity helps students to develop visualisation skills. It builds on the activity on pages 6–7 of Geometry, Figure It Out, Level 3.
Before the students put the puzzle together, encourage them to spend time examining the pieces, visualising which pieces should join together rather than repeatedly trying different combinations. Using different colours for each layer, as shown in the students’ booklet, will help the students to visualise how the pieces go together.
In question 2b, the students can draw the pieces on isometric dot paper (see the back of these teachers’ notes for a copymaster of isometric dot paper). These can be kept as a class resource for other students to use.
A very well-known 3 x 3 x 3 cube is the soma cube. It was invented by a Dane called Piet Hein. The cube is made up of all the irregular shapes formed by combining no more than four cubes. These shapes fit together to make the 3 x 3 x 3 cube. There are more than 230 different ways of constructing the cube. A good strategy for making the cube (and other target shapes) is to use the most complicated piece first. The seven soma pieces are shown below.
As an extension, the students could use the seven soma pieces to make target shapes such as those shown below or to create and draw their own shapes for classmates to model. (Students may have difficulty constructing the first two shapes below.)
1.
a.–b. Practical activity
2.
a.–b. Practical activity
3.
a. Practical activity
b. Strategies will vary. You could:
- decide on the size of the cube and make sure none of the pieces are longer than the sides of the cube
- arrange the multilink cubes into a bigger cube without sticking them together. Then take groups of cubes off the big cube and stick them together in the same shape they had in the cube.
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