Stage 13 · First Steps in Geometry

13.6  Comparing Angles, Sums and Differences, and Angle Bisectors

Everything you did with segments — compare, add, subtract, cut in half — you now do with angles.

Ages 11–14 · Intuition before notation
Knowledge point page

Point 1 of 5 in this lesson: 13.6.1 Comparing angles

13.6.1 Comparing angles

How do you tell which of two angles is bigger? The trick is the same one you used for segments: line them up. Slide one angle on top of the other so their vertices coincide and one pair of sides lies exactly on top of each other. Now just look at where the second sides land. Whichever angle's free side sweeps farther out has the bigger opening.

Two angles stacked at one vertex, sharing the lower side. ∠1 (amber) opens wider than ∠2 (slate), so ∠1 > ∠2. There are exactly three outcomes: ∠1 > ∠2, ∠1 = ∠2, or ∠1 < ∠2.

Here is the single most important idea in the whole lesson, and the one students get wrong most often. The size of an angle depends only on the opening between its sides — never on how long you draw those sides. A wide angle drawn with stubby little sides is still wide; a narrow angle drawn with sides a mile long is still narrow. Length of side is decoration. Only the turn between the rays counts.

Watch out

"This angle has longer sides, so it must be bigger." No. Lengthening the sides of an angle does not change the angle at all — the rays just reach farther in the same two directions. Cover up the outer ends of the sides and the opening is unchanged.

Key idea

To compare two angles, place vertex on vertex and one side on one side. The angle whose other side falls outside is the larger. Equal openings make ∠1 = ∠2 — and equal angles are marked with the same number of arc ticks, exactly as equal segments share the same hatch marks.

eastmath.com · 13.6 Comparing Angles, Sums and Differences, and Angle Bisectors · 13.6.1 Comparing angles