Stage 15 · Triangles

15.2  Tools for Reasoning and Construction

From "it looks true" to "it is true" — definitions, if–then, proof, and compass & straightedge.

Ages 11–14 · Reasoning, one step at a time
Knowledge point page

Point 6 of 6 in this lesson: 15.2.6 The basic constructions

15.2.6 The basic constructions

From those two moves, a small kit of basic constructions follows, and every bigger figure is assembled from them: copy a segment (open the compass to its length and swing it), copy an angle, bisect an angle, build the perpendicular bisector of a segment (which also finds its midpoint — coming in 15.4), and drop a perpendicular from a point to a line (recall perpendicular lines from Stage 14). Master these and you can build the triangles that the congruence tests SSS and SAS describe — that is the bridge to 15.3.

Let us walk through one in full: bisecting an angle — splitting ∠ABC into two equal halves using only arcs and one line. Watch how the equal compass openings force the two halves to be equal; the proof is SSS congruence in disguise.

Try it Bisect an angle with compass and straightedge

Step through the construction. Each step uses only a legal tool — a line through two points, or an arc of a fixed radius.

Construction step 0
Why it works

The first arc makes BP = BQ (same radius). The two crossing arcs make PR = QR (same radius). And BR = BR is shared. So △BPR ≅ △BQR by SSS (next lesson!), which forces ∠PBR = ∠QBR. The construction does not just look bisected — it is, and we can prove it.

eastmath.com · 15.2 Tools for Reasoning and Construction · 15.2.6 The basic constructions