Mathematics • Year 8 • Unit 3 • Lesson 5

Area of Rectangles and Triangles

Build fluency with A = lw for rectangles and A = ½bh for triangles. One worked rectangle example, one guided triangle example with blanks, then eight problems on rectangles, triangles, finding sides, and a composite.

Build · I Do / We Do / You Do

1. I do — fully worked example

Two essentials: A = l × w for rectangles, and units MUST be squared (cm², m²) because area is 2D.

Problem. A rectangular deck is 12.5 m long and 4.8 m wide. Find its area.

Step 1 — Identify the shape and dimensions.

Rectangle: l = 12.5 m, w = 4.8 m.

Reason: rectangles need length AND width. Both are already in the same units (m).

Step 2 — Write the formula.

A = l × w

Reason: rectangle area = length × width. Always write the formula before substituting.

Step 3 — Substitute and calculate.

A = 12.5 × 4.8 = 60

Reason: 12.5 × 4.8 = 12.5 × 4 + 12.5 × 0.8 = 50 + 10 = 60. Or use long multiplication.

Step 4 — Add squared units.

A = 60 m²

Reason: m × m = m². Area is ALWAYS in squared units — never plain m or cm.

Answer: A = 60 m².

Stuck? Revisit lesson § Card 5 — A = l × w. To find a missing side: w = A ÷ l.

2. We do — triangle with blanks

Triangles need the PERPENDICULAR height — the height at right angles to the base. Don't use the slant side! 4 marks

Problem. A triangle has a base of 10 cm and a perpendicular height of 7 cm. Find its area.

Step 1 — Identify base and height:

b = ______ cm, h = ______ cm (h is ______ to b — at 90°)

Step 2 — Write the formula:

A = ½ × ______ × ______

Step 3 — Substitute and calculate:

A = ½ × 10 × 7 = ½ × ______ = ______

Step 4 — Add squared units:

A = ______ cm²

Stuck? Revisit lesson § Card 7 — the formula A = ½bh works for ANY triangle as long as h is perpendicular (⊥) to b.

3. You do — independent practice

Show all working. The first four are foundation (direct application). The middle two are standard (find a missing side). The last two are extension (right triangles and a composite).

Foundation — calculate directly

3.1 A rectangle is 9 cm × 5 cm. Find A.    1 mark

3.2 A square has side length 8 m. Find A. (Hint: A = s².)    1 mark

3.3 A triangle has b = 12 cm and perpendicular h = 5 cm. Find A.    1 mark

3.4 A triangle has b = 14 m and perpendicular h = 9 m. Find A.    1 mark

Standard — find a missing side

3.5 A rectangle has A = 72 cm² and length 9 cm. Find the width.    2 marks

3.6 A triangle has A = 30 cm² and base 12 cm. Find the perpendicular height. (Hint: 30 = ½ × 12 × h, so h = 30 × 2 ÷ 12.)    2 marks

Extension — right triangles and composites

3.7 A right-angled triangle has legs of 10 cm and 7 cm. Find its area. (Hint: in a right triangle, the two legs are automatically perpendicular — use them as base and height.)    2 marks

3.8 An L-shaped room is formed from a 10 cm × 8 cm rectangle with a 4 cm × 3 cm corner removed. Find the area. (Hint: total area − removed area.)    2 marks

Stuck on 3.8? Total rectangle = 10 × 8 = 80 cm². Cut-out = 4 × 3 = 12 cm². L-shape = 80 − 12.

How did this worksheet feel?

What I'll revisit before next class:

Answers — Do not peek before attempting

Section 2 — We do (triangle b = 10, h = 7)

Step 1: b = 10 cm, h = 7 cm (h is perpendicular to b).
Step 2: A = ½ × 10 × 7.
Step 3: A = ½ × 70 = 35.
Step 4: A = 35 cm².

3.1 — Rectangle 9 × 5

A = 9 × 5 = 45 cm².

3.2 — Square s = 8

A = s² = 8² = 64 m².

3.3 — Triangle b = 12, h = 5

A = ½ × 12 × 5 = ½ × 60 = 30 cm².

3.4 — Triangle b = 14, h = 9

A = ½ × 14 × 9 = ½ × 126 = 63 m².

3.5 — Rectangle A = 72, l = 9

w = A ÷ l = 72 ÷ 9 = 8 cm.

3.6 — Triangle A = 30, b = 12

From A = ½bh: 30 = ½ × 12 × h = 6h, so h = 30 ÷ 6 = 5 cm.

3.7 — Right triangle, legs 10 and 7

The legs are perpendicular, so use them as b and h directly: A = ½ × 10 × 7 = 35 cm².

3.8 — L-shape 10 × 8 with 4 × 3 cut

Total = 10 × 8 = 80 cm². Cut = 4 × 3 = 12 cm². L-shape A = 80 − 12 = 68 cm².