In this lesson, students will be able to Understand the concept of rotational symmetry in two-dimensional shapes. Learn about centre of rotation, angle of rotation, and order of rotation.
Apply these ideas to identify rotational symmetry in real-world objects.
Students will be able to:
Reference: NCERT Book Alignment
The lesson is aligned with the NCERT Grade 6 Mathematics Textbook: Ganita Prakash, Chapter 9: Symmetry, Section 2 – Rotational Symmetry.
By the end of the lesson, students will be able to:
This lesson introduces students to the concept of rotational symmetry, an important extension of the symmetry they have already explored through lines of symmetry. Students will learn that some figures can be turned around a fixed point and still look exactly the same. They will understand the terms centre of rotation (the fixed point about which a figure rotates), angle of rotation (the smallest turn needed for the figure to look the same), and order of rotation (how many times a figure matches itself in one full turn). The lesson uses simple, hands-on activities with shape cut-outs and familiar real-world objects such as fans, wheels, and logos to make the concept clear and engaging. By connecting geometry to patterns in art, design, and nature, the lesson helps students see symmetry as both a mathematical property and a visual feature of the world around them.
| Title | Approximate Duration | Procedure | Reference Material |
|---|---|---|---|
| Engage | 5 | Show everyday items with rotational symmetry (fan, steering wheel, clock). Ask students: “When I rotate this, does it look different or the same?” | Slides |
| Explore | 10 | Hands-on Activity: Students use Rotational Symmetry Virtual Lab to have a handson experience about rotational symmetry in everyday objects. | Slides + Virtual Lab |
| Explain | 10 | Teacher explains,
Examples:
| Slides |
| Evaluate | 10 | Challenge: “Find 3 objects at home with rotational symmetry. Note their centre of rotation and order.” | Slides |
| Extend | 5 | Challenge: “Find 3 objects at home with rotational symmetry. Note their centre of rotation and order.”
Discuss how logos (Mercedes, recycling symbol), designs, and mandalas use rotational symmetry. | Slides |
Have you ever seen a ceiling fan or a wheel turning? Even after it turns a little, it still looks the same! Some shapes and objects can be turned (rotated) around a fixed point and still look exactly as they did before. This special property is called rotational symmetry.
Rotational symmetry is all around us. The blades of a fan, the hands of a clock, the pattern on a rangoli, a bicycle wheel, and even some logos you see on TV all have rotational symmetry. Learning about rotational symmetry helps us understand patterns, designs, and how shapes behave when they are turned. In this lesson, you will learn what rotational symmetry is, what the centre of rotation is, and how to find the angle of rotation and the order of rotation for different shapes.
1. What is Rotational Symmetry?
A shape is said to have rotational symmetry if it looks exactly the same after being turned (rotated) around a fixed point by a certain angle.
Example:
2. Centre of Rotation
The centre of rotation is the fixed point about which the shape is turned.
3. Angle of Rotation
4. Order of Rotation
The order of rotation tells us how many times a shape looks exactly the same in one full 360° turn.
5. Real-Life Examples of Rotational Symmetry
Understanding rotational symmetry helps in art, engineering, logo design, and even architecture. It makes designs look balanced, beautiful, and interesting.
This is the list of vocabulary terms used throughout the lesson.
This VR lab helps students discover and practise rotational symmetry by interacting with 3-D/2-D objects in a safe, hands-on virtual environment. Through guided exploration and built-in tools, students will: identify the centre of rotation, measure the angle of rotation, compute the order of rotation, and experiment with making shapes rotationally symmetric (for example by removing a block). The lab uses familiar items (fans, wheels, logos, lego-style blocks, parallelograms) so concepts link directly to real life. Immediate visual feedback and an end-of-lab quiz let students check understanding while the teacher monitors progress.
Step 1: Introduction to Rotational Symmetry
Step 2: Angle and Centre of Rotation through Flower
Step 3: Order Of Rotational Symmetry Through Parallelogram
Step 4: Drag and Drop Activity and Angle Of Rotation
Step 4: Delete the Lego Block Activity
Step 5: Evaluation
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