Home Activity: Angles & Angle Measurement

10-minute activities to practice with your child at home

Dear Families,

Your child is learning about angles - how to identify them, classify them (acute, right, obtuse, straight), and measure them. Angles are everywhere! These activities will help your child see angles in the real world and practice the math skills they're learning in school.

Why This Matters for the FAST Test

The Florida FAST assessment tests angle classification, measurement with a protractor, and finding unknown angle measures when angles share a side. Students need to understand that angle size is about "openness," not the length of the sides.

Angle Types - Quick Reference

Acute
Less than 90 degrees
(Sharp, small)
Right
Exactly 90 degrees
(Square corner)
Obtuse
90 to 180 degrees
(Wide, open)
Straight
Exactly 180 degrees
(Straight line)
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Activity 1: Angle Hunt Around the House

Find and classify angles in everyday objects

  1. Walk around your home together looking for angles.
  2. For each angle found, ask: "Is this acute, right, obtuse, or straight?"
  3. Use an index card corner as a "right angle checker" - compare angles to it!
  4. Places to look: Door hinges, clock hands, furniture corners, roof lines, pizza slices, opened books
  5. Challenge: Can you find at least 3 of each type?
Tip:

Right angles are everywhere! Corners of tables, windows, doors, books, and screens are all right angles. These are your benchmarks for comparing other angles.

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Activity 2: Clock Angle Challenge

Use clock hands to explore angles

  1. Look at a clock (analog with hands works best).
  2. At 3:00, the hands form a right angle (90 degrees). What type is it?
  3. At 6:00, the hands form a straight angle (180 degrees).
  4. Ask: "What type of angle do the hands make at 1:00? At 5:00? At 10:00?"
  5. Challenge: "Can you find a time when the hands make an acute angle? An obtuse angle?"
Tip:

Each hour on a clock represents 30 degrees (360 / 12 = 30). So at 2:00, the angle is about 60 degrees (acute!). At 4:00, it's about 120 degrees (obtuse!).

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Activity 3: Body Angle Game

Make angles with your arms and legs

  1. Call out an angle type and have your child make it with their arms!
  2. "Make a right angle with your elbow!" (Arm bent at 90 degrees)
  3. "Make an acute angle with your arms!" (Hands close together)
  4. "Make an obtuse angle!" (Arms spread wide but not straight)
  5. Switch roles - have your child call out angles for you to make!
Tip:

This kinesthetic activity helps students feel the difference between angle types. A straight arm is 180 degrees, a bent elbow can be acute or obtuse depending on how much it bends!

Questions to Ask Your Child

Resumen en Espanol

Angulos y medicion: Su hijo esta aprendiendo a identificar y medir angulos. Los angulos estan en todas partes - esquinas, puertas, manecillas del reloj.

Tipos de angulos:

Actividades: Busquen angulos en la casa. Observen las manecillas del reloj. Hagan angulos con los brazos.