Teachers Network: About Who We Are
285 West Broadway NY, NY 10013
p 212 966 5582     f 212 941 1787
Celebrating Over 25 Years Google Translate: English to Chinese Google Translate: English to French Google Translate: English to German Google Translate: English to Italian Google Translate: English to Japanese Google Translate: English to Korean Google Translate: English to Russian Google Translate: English to Spanish
Quick Links
Lesson Plan Search: Subject and/or Grade
Site Home
Videos
Online Courses for Teachers
Teacher Store
Lesson Plans
for Teachers

Lesson Plans
Arts
Business
English &
Language Arts
ESL: English as a
Second Language
Foreign Language
Mathematics
Science
History
Special Education
Technology
WebQuests
Teachers Network
Leadership Institute

Teachnet Grants
Award-Winning Lesson Plans
2009 Teachnet
Grant Winners
2009 Adaptor
Grant Winners
2008 Teachnet
Grant Winners
2008 Adaptor
Grants Winners
2007 Teachnet
Grant Winners
Adaptor Grants
Impact II
Math & Science
Learning
Power-to-Learn
Ready-Set-Tech

 

Symmetry All Around You - Line Summetry
Mathematics is much more than finding sums, differences, products, and quotients. Mathematics is a way of looking at the world. As a mathematician, you view the world looking for regularity and order or the lack of order and regularity.

Line Symmetry is also know as Bilateral Symmetry

[Taj Mahal]

We are surrounded by all types of symmetry, a type of regularity and order--in nature, in architecture, in art and much more.

The most common type of symmetry is line or bilateral symmetry. A figure that can be folded in such a way that one-half of it lies exactly on the other half is said to have line symmetry. The two parts of the original pictures are mirror images of each other and are said to be congruent. [Congruent means that both parts have the same shape and the same size.] Look closely at the picture of the Taj Mahal ot the left. Can you find where the line of symmetry is in this picture?

Line Symmetry or Not?

All figures do not have line symmetry. See the examples and non-examples of line symmetry below.

These objects have line symmetry

These objects do not have line symmetry


For more information and activities about Line Symmetry, visit these pages.
[Pattern Blocks] [Letters] [Activities] [Extensions] [Challenge] [Symmetry Home Page]


These symmetry pages have been brought to you by Nancy Powell, a TeachNet Web Mentor from Bloomington High School, Bloomington, IL.
What's New
at Teachers Network
View Our
E-Brochure

Receive Info
About Summer
P-Credit Courses

CLICK HERE
to
receive our
FREE
E-Blasts
Donate to
   Teachers
       Network