Stage 15 · Triangles

15.4  Reflection Symmetry

Fold and match — the axis of symmetry, the mirror image, and the perpendicular bisector hiding inside.

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

Point 5 of 5 in this lesson: 15.4.5 Drawing symmetric figures on a grid

15.4.5 Drawing symmetric figures on a grid

Graph paper turns reflection into simple counting. To reflect a figure across a vertical axis line, take it one vertex at a time: count how many squares a corner sits from the axis, then plant its image the same number of squares on the other side, at the same height. Do that for every corner, then reconnect them in the same order. A vertical axis gives a left↔right flip; a horizontal axis gives an up↔down flip.

Because reflection is a rigid motion, the image you build is congruent to the original — same side lengths, same angles — only its handedness is reversed, exactly as in 15.4.2. This is the third rigid motion alongside the slide of Stage 14 and the turn; together they are the moves that decide whether two figures are congruent.

Try it Reflect a polygon across a grid line

Choose a vertical or horizontal axis. Each corner of the green image is the same number of squares across the axis as its blue partner — amber connectors show the matched distances.

Axis
Watch out

A reflection is not a slide and not a turn. A slide keeps the figure facing the same way; a reflection flips its handedness. If your "reflected" triangle reads the same way around as the original, you slid it — you didn't fold it.

eastmath.com · 15.4 Reflection Symmetry · 15.4.5 Drawing symmetric figures on a grid