Learning Targets
When a figure is a scaled copy of another figure, we know that:
These observations can help explain why one figure is not a scaled copy of another.
For example, even though their corresponding angles have the same measure, the second rectangle is not a scaled copy of the first rectangle, because different pairs of corresponding lengths have different scale factors, 2⋅(½) = 1 but 3⋅(2/3) = 2.
Each of these polygons is a scaled copy of the others.
Here are two quadrilaterals.
Here are two more quadrilaterals.
5. Kiran says that Polygon EFGH is a scaled copy of ABCD, but Lin disagrees. Do you agree with either of them? Explain or show your reasoning.