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Geometry Writing in Math Prompts - Math Journal and Writing
Geometry Writing in Math Prompts - Math Journal and Writing
Geometry Writing in Math Prompts - Math Journal and Writing
Geometry Writing in Math Prompts - Math Journal and Writing
Geometry Writing in Math Prompts - Math Journal and Writing
Geometry Writing in Math Prompts - Math Journal and Writing
Geometry Writing in Math Prompts - Math Journal and Writing
Geometry Writing in Math Prompts - Math Journal and Writing
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What others say

"My goal this year is to get my students to write more in math. This is a great way to accomplish that! I have my students complete the corresponding prompt that matches the lesson we covered that day."
star
Heather G.

Description

Geometry Writing in Math Prompts | Year-Long, No-Prep Math Journal & Writing Resource

Help your geometry students deepen their understanding, reflect on their reasoning, and build mathematical confidence with this comprehensive, ready-to-print writing prompt resource. Designed for a full year of geometry, this set turns ordinary class days into opportunities for reflection, discussion, and growth.


🧠 What’s Included

  • 109 high-quality writing prompts spanning key Geometry units.
  • Each prompt is provided in three versatile formats: (1) Warm-up/exit ticket size, (2) Interactive notebook page, and (3) PDF presentation format.
  • Editable template included so you can craft your own prompts tailored to your class, topic, or year.
  • Full answer key and teacher directions included—no prep required!

The units included are:

1 - Introduction to Geometry

2 - Logic and Proofs

3 - Parallel and Perpendicular Lines

4 - Congruent Triangles

5 - Relationships in Triangles

6 - Similarity

7 - Right Triangles

8 - Quadrilaterals

9 - Transformations

10 - Circles

11 - Area and Perimeter

12 - Surface Area and Volume


💡 Why Teachers Love It

  • Helps students articulate why and how they solve problems—not just what the answer is.
  • Builds mathematical literacy, reasoning, and communication—skills emphasized by standards.
  • Flexible formats make it perfect for warm-ups, journals, discussion prompts, or individual reflection.
  • Saves you time—just print and go.
  • Keeps students engaged with fresh prompts that span the full year of Geometry.


📌 Ideal Uses in Your Classroom

  • Daily or weekly journal prompts: Use one prompt per class or per week to develop writing stamina over time.
  • Interactive notebook insert: Give students notebook versions to glue in and reflect in class.
  • Warm-up or exit ticket: Select a prompt to start class with discussion or close with reflection.
  • Partner/share activity: Have students write responses and then discuss with a partner or small group.
  • Test review/reflection: Use prompts after assessments to help students reflect on mistakes, strategies, and next steps.


✏️ Some of the prompts include:

- When you make mistakes, what do you do first? Do you make corrections or ask questions? Why or why not?

- Do any points remain invariant under glide reflections? Draw a diagram to help you explain.

- How could it be useful to have different formats that can be used when writing a proof?

- Fatima claims that it is possible to rewrite any proof that uses the AAS Theorem as a proof for the ASA Postulate. Do you agree with Fatima? Explain why or why not.

- Why is the hypotenuse always the longest side of a triangle?

- Describe two ways to show that all isosceles right triangles are similar to each other.

- Explain why parallelograms are always quadrilaterals, but quadrilaterals are sometimes parallelograms.

- Explain how you can use a scale factor to determine whether a transformation is an enlargement, a reduction, or a congruence transformation.

- If the measure of an arc in a circle is tripled, will the chord of the new arc be three times as long as the chord or the original arc?

- I want to become better at math so that I can. . .

- How can you show a quadrilateral is an isosceles trapezoid? Draw and label a diagram to help you explain.

- Explain how a cylinder and a prism are alike and how they are different.

- How do you study for a math test? Why do you think that your study methods work? How could you improve them?


You may also be interested in:
GEOMETRY ACTIVITY BUNDLE: First Semester
GEOMETRY ACTIVITY BUNDLE: Second Semester
Geometry Foldable Bundle
Geometry End of Year Review
Geometry Stations Maze Activity Bundle
Emoji Logic Puzzles {for Back to School or Sub Plans}

Geometry "Don't Say It!" Vocabulary Game


Keywords: geometry writing prompts, writing in math geometry, geometry journal pages, math reflection prompts, interactive notebook geometry, geometry warm-ups writing, no-prep geometry activity, high school geometry writing, geometry review journal


Be the first to know about my new discounts, freebies, and products!

Look for the green star near the top of any page within my store and click it to become a follower. You will then receive customized email updates about my store.

If you have any questions or comments please email me at: mrseteachesmath@gmail.com.

This purchase is for one teacher only.

Purchasing this product grants permission for use by one teacher in his or her own classroom. This item is bound by copyright laws and redistributing, editing, selling, or posting this item (or any part thereof) on the Internet are all strictly forbidden. If you wish to share with colleagues, please purchase additional licenses.

Thank you!

© Mrs. E Teaches Math, LLC

Report this resource to TPT
Reported resources will be reviewed by our team. Report this resource to let us know if this resource violates TPT's content guidelines.

Geometry Writing in Math Prompts - Math Journal and Writing

Mrs E Teaches Math
12.4k Followers
$18.00

Highlights

Grades icon
Grades
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N/A
Answer Key
Included
Teaching Duration
1 Year

What others say

"My goal this year is to get my students to write more in math. This is a great way to accomplish that! I have my students complete the corresponding prompt that matches the lesson we covered that day."
star
Heather G.

Save even more with bundles

Writing in Math Journal Prompts BUNDLE | Year-Long, No-Prep Writing & Reflection Resource for High School Math Elevate your math classroom with this comprehensive bundle of writing-in-math prompts—designed to engage students, deepen reasoning, and build mathematical communication across Algebra,
Price $40.00Original Price $54.00Save $14.00
4

Description

Geometry Writing in Math Prompts | Year-Long, No-Prep Math Journal & Writing Resource

Help your geometry students deepen their understanding, reflect on their reasoning, and build mathematical confidence with this comprehensive, ready-to-print writing prompt resource. Designed for a full year of geometry, this set turns ordinary class days into opportunities for reflection, discussion, and growth.


🧠 What’s Included

  • 109 high-quality writing prompts spanning key Geometry units.
  • Each prompt is provided in three versatile formats: (1) Warm-up/exit ticket size, (2) Interactive notebook page, and (3) PDF presentation format.
  • Editable template included so you can craft your own prompts tailored to your class, topic, or year.
  • Full answer key and teacher directions included—no prep required!

The units included are:

1 - Introduction to Geometry

2 - Logic and Proofs

3 - Parallel and Perpendicular Lines

4 - Congruent Triangles

5 - Relationships in Triangles

6 - Similarity

7 - Right Triangles

8 - Quadrilaterals

9 - Transformations

10 - Circles

11 - Area and Perimeter

12 - Surface Area and Volume


💡 Why Teachers Love It

  • Helps students articulate why and how they solve problems—not just what the answer is.
  • Builds mathematical literacy, reasoning, and communication—skills emphasized by standards.
  • Flexible formats make it perfect for warm-ups, journals, discussion prompts, or individual reflection.
  • Saves you time—just print and go.
  • Keeps students engaged with fresh prompts that span the full year of Geometry.


📌 Ideal Uses in Your Classroom

  • Daily or weekly journal prompts: Use one prompt per class or per week to develop writing stamina over time.
  • Interactive notebook insert: Give students notebook versions to glue in and reflect in class.
  • Warm-up or exit ticket: Select a prompt to start class with discussion or close with reflection.
  • Partner/share activity: Have students write responses and then discuss with a partner or small group.
  • Test review/reflection: Use prompts after assessments to help students reflect on mistakes, strategies, and next steps.


✏️ Some of the prompts include:

- When you make mistakes, what do you do first? Do you make corrections or ask questions? Why or why not?

- Do any points remain invariant under glide reflections? Draw a diagram to help you explain.

- How could it be useful to have different formats that can be used when writing a proof?

- Fatima claims that it is possible to rewrite any proof that uses the AAS Theorem as a proof for the ASA Postulate. Do you agree with Fatima? Explain why or why not.

- Why is the hypotenuse always the longest side of a triangle?

- Describe two ways to show that all isosceles right triangles are similar to each other.

- Explain why parallelograms are always quadrilaterals, but quadrilaterals are sometimes parallelograms.

- Explain how you can use a scale factor to determine whether a transformation is an enlargement, a reduction, or a congruence transformation.

- If the measure of an arc in a circle is tripled, will the chord of the new arc be three times as long as the chord or the original arc?

- I want to become better at math so that I can. . .

- How can you show a quadrilateral is an isosceles trapezoid? Draw and label a diagram to help you explain.

- Explain how a cylinder and a prism are alike and how they are different.

- How do you study for a math test? Why do you think that your study methods work? How could you improve them?


You may also be interested in:
GEOMETRY ACTIVITY BUNDLE: First Semester
GEOMETRY ACTIVITY BUNDLE: Second Semester
Geometry Foldable Bundle
Geometry End of Year Review
Geometry Stations Maze Activity Bundle
Emoji Logic Puzzles {for Back to School or Sub Plans}

Geometry "Don't Say It!" Vocabulary Game


Keywords: geometry writing prompts, writing in math geometry, geometry journal pages, math reflection prompts, interactive notebook geometry, geometry warm-ups writing, no-prep geometry activity, high school geometry writing, geometry review journal


Be the first to know about my new discounts, freebies, and products!

Look for the green star near the top of any page within my store and click it to become a follower. You will then receive customized email updates about my store.

If you have any questions or comments please email me at: mrseteachesmath@gmail.com.

This purchase is for one teacher only.

Purchasing this product grants permission for use by one teacher in his or her own classroom. This item is bound by copyright laws and redistributing, editing, selling, or posting this item (or any part thereof) on the Internet are all strictly forbidden. If you wish to share with colleagues, please purchase additional licenses.

Thank you!

© Mrs. E Teaches Math, LLC

Report this resource to TPT
Reported resources will be reviewed by our team. Report this resource to let us know if this resource violates TPT's content guidelines.

Reviews

4.9
Rated 4.93 out of 5, based on 43 reviews
43
ratings
5
40
4
3
3
0
2
0
1
0
Mostly used with 10th grade
Reviews
2
4
10
2
8th
9th
10th
11th
All verified TPT purchases
Rated 5 out of 5
October 15, 2024
My goal this year is to get my students to write more in math. This is a great way to accomplish that! I have my students complete the corresponding prompt that matches the lesson we covered that day.
Graphteacher
(TPT Seller)
155 reviews
Grades taught: 10th
Rated 5 out of 5
August 7, 2024
Excellent resource for incorporating writing in the math classroom.
Cheryl C.
1,572 reviews
Grades taught: 10th
Rated 5 out of 5
February 5, 2024
Critical thinking and writing in math are both vital skills for students. I am currently using these writing prompts as discussion post prompts for my Geometry students. Students get to apply their knowledge of Geometry vocabulary and concepts to apply their knowledge and synthesize their skill set. Great resource to improve literacy skills within mathematics!
MyersEducates
(TPT Seller)
81 reviews
Grades taught: 9th, 10th, 11th
Student populations: Learning difficulties
Rated 5 out of 5
June 24, 2023
I love these writing prompts! I use them as a warm-up from time to time to switch things up and get students talking and thinking. There are some great questions here.
Fun Whitt Math
(TPT Seller)
16 reviews
Grades taught: 8th
Rated 5 out of 5
July 11, 2022
Really made my student think!
Dana E.
169 reviews
Grades taught: 10th
Rated 5 out of 5
April 22, 2022
These are great for getting your students to think!
Jeanne A.
113 reviews
Grades taught: 8th
Rated 5 out of 5
April 5, 2022
I wanted to have my math students writing more in my class, but I was struggling with how to incorporate it. This resource was the perfect way to do that and my students are cooperative because the prompts are relatively short.
Savannah C.
117 reviews
Grades taught: 9th, 10th
Rated 5 out of 5
February 16, 2022
My students loved the activities that we have used out of this resource! They asked for more like this!
Kimberly B.
39 reviews
Grades taught: 9th, 10th, 11th
Student populations: Learning difficulties

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