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 5 of 5 in this lesson: 13.1.5 How solids and flat figures connect

13.1.5 How solids and flat figures connect

Solids and plane figures are not two separate worlds — they are tied together in two natural ways.

Unfold a solid, and you get a flat figure. Cut a cardboard box along its edges and flatten it: the box opens out into a pattern of flat polygons called a net. A net is simply a solid taken apart and laid flat, so that folding it back up rebuilds the solid.

Look at a solid from one side, and you get a flat figure too. Stare straight at a cube and you see a square; that flat picture is a view of the solid. Nets and views are both bridges between the flat and the spatial.

Try it Fold a net up into a cube — and unfold it back
Toggle between the flat net and the assembled solid. The colored faces are the same six squares, just folded.
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The bridge

A net is a solid unfolded flat; a view is a solid seen from one side. Both turn a solid into plane figures — and folding a net back up returns the solid. We will cross this bridge again in solid geometry (Stage 28).

Looking ahead, in Lesson 13.2 we go the other direction and break any figure — flat or solid — down into its tiniest building blocks: points, lines, surfaces, and solids, each one growing out of the last by motion.

eastmath.com · 13.1 From Numbers to Shapes: Stepping into Geometry · 13.1.5 How solids and flat figures connect