Read the Coordinates of Each Point
Your turn: Identify each point's
- Point A: ___ , ___
- Point B: ___ , ___
- Point C: ___ , ___
- Point D: ___ , ___
Horizontal position first (x), then vertical (y)
Which Quadrant Contains the Point?
Which quadrant is the point
Think before the next slide:
- What does a negative
tell you about direction? - What does a negative
tell you about direction? - Which quadrant has both coordinates negative?
Finding Distance with a Shared Coordinate
Same
Same
Example: Vertical Distance Crossing Zero
Count:
Both orders work:
Example: Horizontal Pair with Shared Y
Points
Count check: 4 units left of 0, 2 units right → total 6 ✓
Subtract the
Example: Both Points in Negative Region
Points
Same procedure — absolute value handles it automatically:
No special case needed — the formula works the same in every quadrant.
Your Turn: Find the Distance
Find the distance from
These points share a
Pause and try before the next slide.
Answer: Distance from to
Check the other order too:
Key reminder: Absolute value ensures distance is always positive, regardless of order.
From Practice to Real-World Problems
So far: We can plot points and find distances between pairs that share a coordinate.
Next: Apply those tools to solve real-world problems — maps, missing vertices, and total distances.
The key habit: Ask "what does this coordinate mean?" and "what does this distance represent?"
City Grid: Map Problem Setup
A city grid is modeled on a coordinate plane:
- City Hall at
- Library at
- Park at
City Grid: City Hall to Library
City Hall
Same
The library is 7 blocks south of City Hall.
City Grid: Library to Park and Total Walk
Library
Same
Total walk: City Hall → Library → Park =
Finding the Missing Rectangle Vertex
Three vertices:
and share → top edge is horizontal and share → right edge is vertical- Fourth vertex:
Calculate the Rectangle Perimeter Yourself
Rectangle vertices:
| Side | Shared coordinate | Distance formula | Length |
|---|---|---|---|
| Top | ? | ||
| Right | ? | ||
| Bottom | ? | ||
| Left | ? |
Find each length, then add for perimeter.
Rectangle Perimeter Answers Step by Step
| Side | Distance | Length |
|---|---|---|
| Top | 6 units | |
| Right | 4 units | |
| Bottom | 6 units | |
| Left | 4 units |
Perimeter =
What to Remember from This Lesson
- Plot
: origin → horizontal (sign = direction) → vertical - Same
→ vertical line → - Same
→ horizontal line →
Watch out:
Always use absolute value — distance is never negative
Subtract the coordinates that differ, not the ones that match
The axis is just a line — crossing it doesn't change the count
What's Next: Polygons in the Coordinate Plane
Coming up in 6.G.A.3:
- Draw polygons in the coordinate plane given coordinates for vertices
- Use coordinates to find perimeter and area of figures
- Connect coordinate geometry to real-world design problems
The distance skills from today are your foundation for all of that.