Learn on PengienVision, Mathematics, Grade 6Chapter 7: Solve Area, Surface Area, and Volume Problems

Lesson 1: Find Areas of Parallelograms and Rhombuses

In this Grade 6 lesson from enVision Mathematics Chapter 7, students learn how to find the area of parallelograms, rhombuses, and triangles using the formulas A = bh and A = ½bh. Students explore how a parallelogram can be decomposed diagonally into two identical triangles to derive the triangle area formula. Practice problems apply these formulas to real-world contexts including stained glass windows, origami figures, and baseball diamonds.

Section 1

Area of a Parallelogram

Property

A parallelogram can be rearranged into a rectangle with the same base and height. Choose any side of the parallelogram as the base (length bb), and let hh be the perpendicular distance between the base and the opposite side.
The area is given by the formula:

Area=bh\operatorname{Area} = bh

Examples

  • A parallelogram has a base of 12 cm and a height of 5 cm. Its area is 12×5=6012 \times 5 = 60 square cm.
  • A section of a patio is shaped like a parallelogram with a base of 8 feet and a height of 6 feet. The area is 8×6=488 \times 6 = 48 square feet.
  • Even if the slanted side is 9 inches, if the base is 15 inches and the height is 7 inches, the area is 15×7=10515 \times 7 = 105 square inches.

Explanation

Think of a parallelogram as a slanted rectangle. By slicing off a triangle from one end and moving it to the other, you create a perfect rectangle. This new rectangle has the same base and height, which is why the area formula works!

Section 2

Area of a Rhombus

Property

The area of a rhombus equals half the product of its diagonals:

A=d1×d22A = \frac{d_1 \times d_2}{2}

where d1d_1 and d2d_2 are the lengths of the two diagonals.

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Chapter 7: Solve Area, Surface Area, and Volume Problems

  1. Lesson 1Current

    Lesson 1: Find Areas of Parallelograms and Rhombuses

  2. Lesson 2

    Lesson 2: Solve Triangle Area Problems

  3. Lesson 3

    Lesson 3: Find Areas of Trapezoids and Kites

  4. Lesson 4

    Lesson 4: Find Areas of Polygons

  5. Lesson 5

    Lesson 5: Represent Solid Figures Using Nets

  6. Lesson 6

    Lesson 6: Find Surface Areas of Prisms

  7. Lesson 7

    Lesson 7: Find Surface Areas of Pyramids

  8. Lesson 8

    Lesson 8: Find Volume with Fractional Edge Lengths

Lesson overview

Expand to review the lesson summary and core properties.

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Section 1

Area of a Parallelogram

Property

A parallelogram can be rearranged into a rectangle with the same base and height. Choose any side of the parallelogram as the base (length bb), and let hh be the perpendicular distance between the base and the opposite side.
The area is given by the formula:

Area=bh\operatorname{Area} = bh

Examples

  • A parallelogram has a base of 12 cm and a height of 5 cm. Its area is 12×5=6012 \times 5 = 60 square cm.
  • A section of a patio is shaped like a parallelogram with a base of 8 feet and a height of 6 feet. The area is 8×6=488 \times 6 = 48 square feet.
  • Even if the slanted side is 9 inches, if the base is 15 inches and the height is 7 inches, the area is 15×7=10515 \times 7 = 105 square inches.

Explanation

Think of a parallelogram as a slanted rectangle. By slicing off a triangle from one end and moving it to the other, you create a perfect rectangle. This new rectangle has the same base and height, which is why the area formula works!

Section 2

Area of a Rhombus

Property

The area of a rhombus equals half the product of its diagonals:

A=d1×d22A = \frac{d_1 \times d_2}{2}

where d1d_1 and d2d_2 are the lengths of the two diagonals.

Book overview

Jump across lessons in the current chapter without opening the full course modal.

Continue this chapter

Chapter 7: Solve Area, Surface Area, and Volume Problems

  1. Lesson 1Current

    Lesson 1: Find Areas of Parallelograms and Rhombuses

  2. Lesson 2

    Lesson 2: Solve Triangle Area Problems

  3. Lesson 3

    Lesson 3: Find Areas of Trapezoids and Kites

  4. Lesson 4

    Lesson 4: Find Areas of Polygons

  5. Lesson 5

    Lesson 5: Represent Solid Figures Using Nets

  6. Lesson 6

    Lesson 6: Find Surface Areas of Prisms

  7. Lesson 7

    Lesson 7: Find Surface Areas of Pyramids

  8. Lesson 8

    Lesson 8: Find Volume with Fractional Edge Lengths