MATHEMATICS 6
PLANE AND SOLID FIGURES
OBJECTIVES
• differentiates solid figures from
plane figures
• identifies the faces of a solid figure
SETTING OF STANDARDS
LET’S RECALL
Directions: What solid figure does each
landmark represents?
SPHERE
SM Mall of Asia
US Embassy in London
CUBE
The Twin Tower or the world
Trade Center in New York
RECTANGULAR PRISM
The Pyramid in
Cebu
PYRAMID
The Leaning Tower of
San Fernando Pampanga
CYLINDER
IDENTIFY ME
Directions: Identify each figure.
CLASSIFY THESE
Mrs. Cruz visited a medical store and she found
the following:
Which of these
are solid figures?
Which of these
are plane figures?
LET’S EX-PLANE
What are plane figures?
Plane figures are flat two dimensional figure;
with length and width.
Plane figures are closed figures whose
points lie of the same surface.
Common examples:
Square Rectangle
Trapezoid
Circle
Triangle
A closed plane figure that serves as
pattern used to form solid figure is
called net.
Examples of
Nets
What is the difference between plane
figures with solid figures?
BE SOLID!
What are solid figures?
Solid figures are geometric figures having
three dimensions: length, width, and
height.
A polyhedron is a solid figure whose sides
are all polygons.
Each side is called face.
Two faces that intersect in a line segment
is called edge.
Two edges that intersect in a point is called
a vertex.
Examples:
A prism is a polyhedron that has two congruent
parallel faces called bases.
There are different kinds of prisms named according
to the shape of its base.
A pyramid is a polyhedron whose base is a
polygon and the lateral faces are triangles.
A cylinder has two circular bases that are
congruent and parallel.
A cone has one circular base and one vertex.
A sphere is a curved surface of all
points that are of the same distance
from the center
GROUP ACTIVITY: FILL IN
Mechanics:
1. Divide the class into 2 and distribute
activity cards.
2. Each group will present their output
PRESENTATION OF OUTPUT
SEARCH AND DESCRIBE
Directions: Get different shapes of
plane figures and solid figures inside
the classroom. Let them describe in
front of what they have searched and
tell the importance of these in their
daily life.
LET’S REMEMBER
What is the difference between a plane
figure and a solid figure?
Plane figures are flat two dimensional
figure; with length and width
Solid figures are geometric figures
having three dimensions: length, width,
and height.
WHAT I AM?
Directions: Using the Word Wall, identify which
is being describe by each statement below and
choose the answer from the box.
VISUALIZE ME!
Directions: Study the given figure and then answer each.
1. What polygonal regions compose
the base?
2. What kind of lateral faces does
the space figure have?
3. Name the bases of the space
figure.
4. How many vertices does the
space figure have?
5. How many edges are there?
GO FOR AN EXTRA MILE
Directions: Solve the following problem.
1) A decagon is a ten-sided polygon. How many
faces, edges, and vertices will a pyramid with a
decagonal base has?
2) A square pyramid is on a top of a square prism.
Their bases are congruent. How many faces,
vertices, and edges does the resulting
polyhedron have?