Students think longer rays make bigger angles. They may say a small angle with long sides is "bigger" than a large angle with short sides.
Draw two identical angles with different ray lengths. Measure both with a protractor to show they're the same. Explain: "The angle is measured by how much the rays OPEN, not how long they are."
Students read 30 degrees instead of 150 degrees (or vice versa) because protractors have two scales.
Teach: "First, estimate! Is this angle acute or obtuse?" An obtuse angle can't be 30 degrees! Always check if your answer makes sense with what you see.
Students don't place the vertex at the center point or don't align one ray with the baseline.
Use the mnemonic: "Vertex on the dot, ray on the line, read the scale where the other ray shines!" Practice step-by-step alignment before measuring.
Show angles formed by opening a door, hands of a clock, or scissors. Define vertex (corner point) and rays (sides of the angle).
"An angle is formed when two rays share the same starting point. We call that point the vertex. The size of an angle tells us how much one ray has rotated from the other."
Use an index card corner as a "right angle checker." Compare angles to the corner:
Model step-by-step:
"When two angles share a side, we can add them together! If angle A is 35 degrees and angle B is 55 degrees, and they share a side, together they make 35 + 55 = 90 degrees - a right angle!"
Show diagrams where angles combine. Practice: If the whole angle is 120 degrees and one part is 45 degrees, what's the other part? (120 - 45 = 75 degrees)
Distribute worksheets. Have protractors available. Remind students to estimate first, then measure, then check if the answer makes sense.
For struggling students: Focus on classification first before measurement. Use right angle checkers (index cards) before protractors. Color-code the two scales on protractors.
For advanced students: Introduce reflex angles (greater than 180 degrees). Challenge with multi-step angle problems. Explore angles in triangles (sum = 180 degrees).
For home: Look for angles around the house - corners, doors, scissors, clock hands.