Geometry Concepts

97 concepts · Grades 3-5, 6-8, 9-12, K-2 · 160 prerequisite connections

This family view narrows the full math map to one connected cluster. Read it from left to right: earlier nodes support later ones, and dense middle sections usually mark the concepts that hold the largest share of future work together.

Use the graph to plan review, then use the full concept list below to open precise pages for definitions, examples, formulas, and related mistake guides. That combination keeps the page useful for both human study flow and crawlable internal linking.

Concept Dependency Graph

Concepts flow left to right, from foundational to advanced. Hover to highlight connections. Click any concept to learn more.

Basic ShapesK-2Angles3-5Perimeter3-5Area3-5Symmetry3-5Triangles3-5Pythagorean The...6-8Circles3-5Pi (π)6-8Volume6-8Congruence6-8Similarity6-8PointK-2LineK-2Plane6-8Dimension9-12Distance9-12Orientation9-12Polygon3-5Surface Area6-8Scaling in Space9-12Proportional Ge...9-12Vector Intuition9-12Direction9-12Displacement9-12Geometric Trans...9-12Translation9-12Rotation9-12Reflection6-8Dilation6-8Geometric Invar...9-12Parallelism6-8Perpendicularity6-8Slope in Geometry9-12Geometric Const...6-8Intersection (G...6-8Tangent Intuition9-12Curvature Intui...6-8Spatial ReasoningK-2Cross-Section6-8Projection9-12Coordinate Repr...6-8Geometric Model...6-8Geometric Optim...6-8Shortest Path I...9-12Packing Intuition6-8Tiling Intuition3-5Rigid vs Flexib...9-12Boundary3-5Interior vs Ext...3-5Topology Intuit...6-8Geometric Abstr...6-8Right Triangle ...9-12Special Right T...9-12Congruence Crit...9-12Similarity Crit...9-12Triangle Angle ...6-8Exterior Angle ...6-8Triangle Inequa...6-8Midsegment Theo...9-12Circumference6-8Area of a Circle6-8Volume of a Cyl...6-8Volume of a Cone6-8Volume of a Sph...6-8Surface Area of...6-8Surface Area of...6-8Angle Relations...6-8Transversal Ang...6-8Quadrilateral H...3-5Central Angle9-12Inscribed Angle9-12Arc Length9-12Sector Area9-12Tangent to a Ci...9-12Distance Formula9-12Midpoint Formula9-12Coordinate Proofs9-12Scale Drawings6-8Cross-Sections ...6-8Indirect Measur...6-8Geometric Proofs9-12Parallel and Pe...6-8Similar Figures6-8Rotational Symm...6-8Nets6-8Sphere Surface ...9-12Composition of ...9-12Analytic Geometry9-12Tessellation6-8Angle Measurement3-5Volume of Recta...3-5Area of Triangles6-8Area of Paralle...6-8Area of Trapezo...6-8Distance on the...6-8Informal Transf...6-8

Connected Families

Geometry concepts have 60 connections to other families.

All Geometry Concepts

Basic Shapes

Closed two-dimensional figures with specific properties like sides, angles, and corners that define their shape.

K-2

Angles

The amount of rotation between two rays that share a common endpoint, measured in degrees or radians.

3-5

Perimeter

The total distance around the outside of a two-dimensional shape, found by adding all its side lengths.

3-5

Area

The amount of two-dimensional space inside a flat shape, measured in square units.

3-5

Symmetry

A geometric property where a figure remains unchanged under a specific transformation such as reflection, rotation, or translation. A shape has reflection symmetry when a line divides it into two mirror-image halves, and rotational symmetry when it looks the same after turning by a certain angle.

3-5

Triangles

A polygon with exactly three sides and three interior angles that always sum to exactly 180 degrees.

3-5

Pythagorean Theorem

In a right triangle, the square of the hypotenuse equals the sum of the squares of the other two sides.

6-8

Circles

The set of all points in a plane at a fixed distance (the radius) from a central point called the center.

3-5

Pi (π)

The ratio of a circle's circumference to its diameter, approximately $3.14159\ldots$

6-8

Volume

The amount of three-dimensional space that an object occupies, measured in cubic units such as cm³.

6-8

Congruence

Two geometric figures are congruent if they have exactly the same size and shape, so one can be placed on the other perfectly.

6-8

Similarity

Two figures are similar if they have the same shape but possibly different sizes, meaning all corresponding angles are equal and all corresponding sides are in the same ratio (the scale factor).

6-8

Point

An exact location in space with no size, length, or width—zero dimensions; named with a capital letter.

K-2

Line

A perfectly straight path extending infinitely in both directions through two distinct points, with no thickness.

K-2

Plane

A perfectly flat surface extending infinitely in all directions with zero thickness; defined by three non-collinear points.

6-8

Dimension

The number of independent directions needed to specify any location in a given space or object. A point is 0D, a line is 1D, a plane is 2D, and space is 3D. Dimension determines which measurement formulas apply and how quantities scale.

9-12

Distance

The length of the shortest path between two points, always a non-negative real number.

9-12

Orientation

Orientation is the directional sense of a geometric figure — whether its vertices are ordered clockwise or counterclockwise. It describes how a shape is 'facing' in space, and is preserved by rotations and translations but reversed by reflections.

9-12

Polygon

A closed two-dimensional figure formed by three or more straight line segments connected end-to-end.

3-5

Surface Area

The total area of all the faces or surfaces that enclose a three-dimensional object, measured in square units.

6-8

Scaling in Space

How length, area, and volume measurements change when a figure is uniformly enlarged or shrunk by a scale factor.

9-12

Proportional Geometry

Proportional geometry studies how corresponding lengths, areas, and volumes scale between similar figures. If two triangles are similar with scale factor k, their sides are in ratio k, their areas in ratio k², and their volumes in ratio k³.

9-12

Vector Intuition

A mathematical object with both a magnitude (size) and a direction, often drawn as an arrow.

9-12

Direction

The orientation of movement or facing in space, independent of speed or distance—where something points.

9-12

Displacement

The straight-line change in position from start to end, with both a distance and a direction.

9-12

Geometric Transformation

A function that maps every point of a geometric figure to a new position, changing its location, orientation, or size.

9-12

Translation

A rigid transformation that slides every point of a figure the same distance in the same direction.

9-12

Rotation

A rigid transformation that turns every point of a figure by a fixed angle around a fixed center of rotation.

9-12

Reflection

A rigid transformation that flips a figure over a line (the mirror line), producing a mirror image.

6-8

Dilation

A transformation that enlarges or shrinks a figure by a scale factor from a center point.

6-8

Geometric Invariance

A property or measurement of a geometric figure that remains unchanged when a particular transformation is applied.

9-12

Parallelism

Lines in the same plane that never intersect because they maintain a constant distance from each other.

6-8

Perpendicularity

Lines, segments, or planes that intersect at exactly a right angle of $90°$ to each other.

6-8

Slope in Geometry

The steepness of a line expressed as rise over run, connecting the algebraic slope formula to the geometric angle of inclination.

9-12

Geometric Constraints

Conditions that limit or restrict the possible positions, sizes, or shapes of geometric objects in a problem.

6-8

Intersection (Geometric)

The set of all points where two or more geometric objects (lines, planes, curves) meet or cross each other.

6-8

Tangent Intuition

A line that just barely touches a curve at exactly one point without crossing it, matching the curve's direction at that point.

9-12

Curvature Intuition

A measure of how quickly a curve bends or deviates from being a straight line at a given point.

6-8

Spatial Reasoning

The cognitive ability to visualize, manipulate, and reason about two- and three-dimensional objects mentally in space.

K-2

Cross-Section

The two-dimensional shape that is revealed when a three-dimensional solid is sliced through by a flat plane.

6-8

Projection

The image formed when points of a shape are mapped onto a lower-dimensional surface along parallel or converging rays.

9-12

Coordinate Representation

Describing geometric objects precisely using ordered pairs $(x, y)$ or triples $(x, y, z)$ in a coordinate system.

6-8

Geometric Modeling

Using geometric shapes and their relationships to represent, approximate, and analyze real-world objects and situations.

6-8

Geometric Optimization

Finding the best geometric configuration — the shape that maximizes area, minimizes perimeter, uses the least material, or achieves some other optimal outcome — subject to given constraints.

6-8

Shortest Path Intuition

The minimum-length route connecting two points, whose form depends on the geometry of the underlying space.

9-12

Packing Intuition

Arranging objects of given shapes to fit as many as possible into a bounded region without any overlapping.

6-8

Tiling Intuition

Covering an entire surface with copies of one or more shapes that fit together perfectly with no gaps and no overlaps.

3-5

Rigid vs Flexible Shapes

A rigid shape cannot be deformed without breaking — its sides and angles are locked. A triangle is always rigid because its three side lengths uniquely determine its angles. A rectangle, by contrast, is flexible: it can collapse into a parallelogram because four side lengths do not fix the angles.

9-12

Boundary

The edge or outline that separates the interior of a region from its exterior; the set of points on the dividing border.

3-5

Interior vs Exterior

Interior consists of points strictly inside a boundary; exterior consists of points strictly outside the boundary.

3-5

Topology Intuition

Properties of shapes that are preserved under continuous deformation (stretching, bending, and twisting, but not tearing or gluing). Topology studies what remains the same when you treat shapes as if they were made of infinitely stretchable rubber.

6-8

Geometric Abstraction

Deliberately ignoring certain physical details of a shape to focus on the essential geometric properties being studied.

6-8

Right Triangle Trigonometry

The three primary trigonometric ratios—sine, cosine, and tangent—defined as ratios of specific sides in a right triangle.

9-12

Special Right Triangles

Two families of right triangles whose side ratios can be determined exactly: the 30-60-90 triangle with sides in ratio $1 : \sqrt{3} : 2$, and the 45-45-90 triangle with sides in ratio $1 : 1 : \sqrt{2}$.

9-12

Congruence Criteria

Five sets of conditions that guarantee two triangles are congruent: SSS (three pairs of equal sides), SAS (two sides and the included angle), ASA (two angles and the included side), AAS (two angles and a non-included side), and HL (hypotenuse-leg for right triangles).

9-12

Similarity Criteria

Three sets of conditions that guarantee two triangles are similar: AA (two pairs of equal angles), SAS~ (two pairs of proportional sides with equal included angle), and SSS~ (all three pairs of sides in the same ratio).

9-12

Triangle Angle Sum

The three interior angles of any triangle always sum to exactly $180°$, so knowing two angles determines the third.

6-8

Exterior Angle Theorem

An exterior angle of a triangle equals the sum of the two non-adjacent (remote) interior angles.

6-8

Triangle Inequality

The sum of the lengths of any two sides of a triangle must be strictly greater than the length of the third side.

6-8

Midsegment Theorem

A segment connecting the midpoints of two sides of a triangle is parallel to the third side and exactly half its length.

9-12

Circumference

The total distance around the outside of a circle; equal to $\pi$ times the diameter or $2\pi r$.

6-8

Area of a Circle

The amount of space enclosed inside a circle, calculated as $\pi$ times the square of the radius.

6-8

Volume of a Cylinder

The amount of three-dimensional space inside a cylinder, found by multiplying the area of the circular base by the height.

6-8

Volume of a Cone

The amount of three-dimensional space inside a cone, which is exactly one-third the volume of a cylinder with the same base and height.

6-8

Volume of a Sphere

The amount of three-dimensional space inside a sphere, given by $\frac{4}{3}\pi r^3$.

6-8

Surface Area of a Prism

The total area of all faces of a prism, found by adding the areas of the two bases and all lateral (side) faces.

6-8

Surface Area of a Cylinder

The total area of the surface of a cylinder, consisting of two circular bases and a rectangular lateral surface that wraps around.

6-8

Angle Relationships

Fundamental relationships between pairs of angles: supplementary angles sum to $180°$, complementary angles sum to $90°$, vertical angles are equal, and adjacent angles share a common ray.

6-8

Transversal Angles

When a transversal (a line that crosses two parallel lines), it creates eight angles with four special relationships: corresponding angles are equal, alternate interior angles are equal, alternate exterior angles are equal, and co-interior (same-side interior) angles are supplementary.

6-8

Quadrilateral Hierarchy

The quadrilateral hierarchy organizes four-sided polygons by their properties in a classification tree. Every square is a rectangle, every rectangle is a parallelogram, and every parallelogram is a trapezoid — each level adds constraints like equal sides or right angles.

3-5

Central Angle

An angle whose vertex is at the center of a circle, with its two rays intersecting the circle at two points. Its measure equals the measure of the intercepted arc.

9-12

Inscribed Angle

An angle whose vertex lies on the circle and whose sides are chords of the circle. Its measure is exactly half the measure of the intercepted arc.

9-12

Arc Length

The distance along a portion of a circle's circumference, determined by the central angle and the radius.

9-12

Sector Area

The area of a 'pie slice' region of a circle, bounded by two radii and the arc between them.

9-12

Tangent to a Circle

A line that touches a circle at exactly one point, called the point of tangency. At this point, the tangent line is perpendicular to the radius.

9-12

Distance Formula

A formula for finding the distance between two points in the coordinate plane, derived directly from the Pythagorean theorem.

9-12

Midpoint Formula

A formula for finding the point exactly halfway between two points in the coordinate plane, by averaging their coordinates.

9-12

Coordinate Proofs

A method of proving geometric properties by placing figures on a coordinate plane and using algebraic formulas (distance, midpoint, slope) to verify relationships.

9-12

Scale Drawings

Creating or interpreting drawings and models where every length is multiplied by the same constant (the scale factor), preserving shape while changing size.

6-8

Cross-Sections of 3D Figures

A cross-section is the flat, two-dimensional shape revealed when a plane cuts through a three-dimensional solid. For example, slicing a cylinder parallel to its base gives a circle, while slicing it at an angle gives an ellipse.

6-8

Indirect Measurement

Indirect measurement finds unknown lengths by using proportional relationships instead of direct measuring tools.

6-8

Geometric Proofs

Geometric proofs establish that a geometric claim is true by chaining justified statements from definitions, theorems, and givens.

9-12

Parallel and Perpendicular

Parallel lines never intersect and have matching direction; perpendicular lines intersect at right angles.

6-8

Similar Figures

Similar figures have the same shape with corresponding angles equal and corresponding sides proportional.

6-8

Rotational Symmetry

A figure has rotational symmetry if it looks identical after being rotated by some angle less than $360°$ about a central point. The order of rotational symmetry is the number of distinct positions where the figure looks the same during a full rotation.

6-8

Nets

A net is a two-dimensional layout of all the faces of a three-dimensional solid, arranged so that folding along the edges produces the original solid. Nets reveal the surface area as the sum of flat face areas.

6-8

Sphere Surface Area

The total area covering the curved outer surface of a sphere, given by the formula $$S = 4\pi r^2$$.

9-12

Composition of Transformations

Composition of transformations applies two or more transformations in sequence to a figure, where the output of one transformation becomes the input of the next. The order matters because transformation composition is generally not commutative.

9-12

Analytic Geometry

Analytic geometry studies geometric objects using coordinate systems and algebraic equations, translating shapes into formulas so that algebra can solve geometry problems. This field, founded by Descartes, unifies algebra and geometry.

9-12

Tessellation

A tessellation is a pattern that covers an infinite plane with repeated geometric shapes, leaving no gaps and having no overlaps.

6-8

Angle Measurement

Angle measurement is the process of determining the size of an angle in degrees using a protractor or by calculation.

3-5

Volume of Rectangular Prisms

The volume of a rectangular prism is the number of unit cubes that fill the solid, calculated by multiplying length, width, and height.

3-5

Area of Triangles

The area of a triangle is half the product of its base and height: $A = \frac{1}{2}bh$.

6-8

Area of Parallelograms

The area of a parallelogram is the product of its base and perpendicular height: $A = bh$.

6-8

Area of Trapezoids

The area of a trapezoid is half the sum of its two parallel bases multiplied by the height: $A = \frac{1}{2}(b_1 + b_2)h$.

6-8

Distance on the Coordinate Plane

The distance between two points on the coordinate plane is found using the Pythagorean theorem: $d = \sqrt{(x_2 - x_1)^2 + (y_2 - y_1)^2}$.

6-8

Informal Transformational Proof

An informal transformational proof uses translations, rotations, reflections, and dilations to explain why two figures are congruent or similar.

6-8