Teacher: Fred Kral, Ph.D.

Email me: fkral

Call or text me: 415-857-KRAL (5725)
Call classroom: 415-339-9336 x111
Get info on homework and more: http://teach.kralsite.com or bitly kraltms [http://bit.ly/kraltms]

Course Description

Geometry is a college preparatory course that is normally taken after Algebra 1 and before Algebra 2. Topics include points, lines, planes, angles, triangles, polygons, parallelism, congruency, similarity, triangle inequalities, trigonometry, circles, areas and volumes, coordinate geometry, symmetry, and transformations. Theorems and other results are derived using formal reasoning with precise and accurate language using logic, deductive reasoning, inductive reasoning, and indirect reasoning. Mathematical ideas are communicated using graphical (drawings, graphs, sketches, geometric constructions), numerical (tables, patterns, calculations), algebraic (formulas, symbolic reasoning, solutions), and verbal approaches (conjectures, proofs, explanations, self-reflection). Puzzles, applications, and projects are integral parts of the course.

Required text and supplemental materials

Assessment

Homework: timely completion of homework assignments. Assessed formally and informally. 5 points per homework
Review homework: timely completion of representative problems in preparation for tests and exams. 20 points per review
Quizzes: written and graphical solutions of problems similar to homework problems. 50 points per quiz
Mid-Semester Tests: written and graphical solutions of problems from recent material. 200 points per test
End-Semester Examinations: written and graphical solutions of problems from the whole semester (comprehensive). 15% of course grade
In-Class work: positive energy and interest level during in-class work including discussion, working on investigations, practice during class, and using the notebook. Assessed informally. 20 points per week
Notebook use: documenting work, contributing to all sections, putting it to good use for learning, making it your own, showing the ups and downs of the learning process. Assessed informally. included in in-class work
Committment to learning: Taking on what is challenging to you, getting help, communicating with the teacher, and engaging with the material. Assessed informally. 100 points per semester
Projects: quality and correctness of written and graphical results.

100 points per project

 

I encourage study groups. You may work with others (not just students) unless instructed otherwise as long as all of you contribute. It is wise to put the name of each contributing student on an assignment to avoid issues with plagiarism.

 

Come visit, text, or email as often as you like! – Fred

 

Please see the web site for other information including assignments.