Remember to find a partner for the Trig. Ratio Project
Awesome! Let's meet at my house at 6 o'clock.
OMG! I hope my room is clean!
Do you think you we can work together on the trig ratio project?
Let's look for a trig ratio in here!
Naw ...... Let's go outside.. It's a nice day. We can find ratios of nature.
This is my Geometry teacher, Ms. Dean; her goal is to understand Geometry in our everyday life. My name is Jim, and my friend Jill and I will find Trig. ratios on the way to our neighborhoods.
I hope no one disturbs my sleep. I sure am hungry...
I wonder how far that gray wolf is?
Wow, I wonder how tall the tree is? such a cool bird!
I think Jill likes me. She is smart and cute! Plus, she has an A in Geometry!
Wow! her room is really neat! We should head outside to find the ratios before her parents find me in here.
Jill spots a wild animal from atop a55-meter cliff. The angle of depression from the cliff is 45 degrees. She uses Trigonometry to find out how far the animal is from the base of the cliff.
Jim finds himself a wild bird atop a tree, he is looking at the tree that is 20 feet away and he is looking up at it at a 30-degree angle. He calculates how tall is the tree? He figures it out using trigonometry from Mrs. Dean's Class?
Jill and Jim decided to rent a boat. They knew that the lighthouse 100m above the sea, the angle of depression of a boat is 20 degrees. They use Trigonometry to find out: How far is the boat from the lighthouse?