Stage 13 · First Steps in Geometry

13.1  From Numbers to Shapes: Stepping into Geometry

Algebra asks how much. Geometry asks what shape.

Ages 11–14 · Intuition before notation
Knowledge point page

Point 3 of 5 in this lesson: 13.1.3 Sorting solids: flat faces vs a curved surface

13.1.3 Sorting solids: flat faces vs a curved surface

Run your finger over each solid. On some, your finger always travels along a flat face and turns a sharp corner to reach the next one — a cube is all flat faces. On others, your finger glides over a curved surface that never lies flat — think of rolling a marble or a can.

That single test sorts every solid into two families:

A polyhedron is a solid whose surface is made entirely of flat faces (the faces are polygons). Prisms and pyramids are polyhedra. The cube, cuboid, triangular prism, and square pyramid all belong here.

A solid of revolution has at least one curved surface. The beautiful fact behind the name: each of these is made by taking a flat shape and spinning it around a line. Spin a rectangle and you sweep out a cylinder; spin a right triangle and you sweep out a cone; spin a half-disk (a semicircle) and you sweep out a sphere.

Try it Step through the solids and classify each
Press + and − to cycle through seven solids. Watch the readout name each one and tell you its family.
Solid 1
The two families

Polyhedron — every face is flat (a polygon). Examples: cube, cuboid, prism, pyramid.
Solid of revolution — at least one curved surface, made by spinning a flat shape. Examples: cylinder, cone, sphere.

eastmath.com · 13.1 From Numbers to Shapes: Stepping into Geometry · 13.1.3 Sorting solids: flat faces vs a curved surface