Description
This set of binder notes provide students with an organized set of notes and guided practice on midsegments in triangles. The front side introduces students to the idea of a triangle midsegment, has them fill in notes on the Triangle Midsegment Theorem, and then guides students through 14 practice problems on identifying parallel segments, finding missing lengths, and using algebra to find missing variables within segment lengths.
Download the preview to get a better look at the page structure and see the exact notes and types of problems included!
This resource is included in the following bundles:
★ Geometry Binder Notes Unit 5 (Relationships within Triangles
★ Geometry Binder Notes - Full Year Bundle
★ Geometry Curriculum - Full Store Bundle
You may be interested in some of my other geometry resources:
Check out some of my other sets of guided binder notes:
★ Geometry
Questions, feedback, or requests? Feel free to email me at:
Updated 4/29/25 - Question #14 was edited! I accidentally used 'x' twice, instead of 'x' and 'y'.
Highlights
Save even more with bundles
Description
This set of binder notes provide students with an organized set of notes and guided practice on midsegments in triangles. The front side introduces students to the idea of a triangle midsegment, has them fill in notes on the Triangle Midsegment Theorem, and then guides students through 14 practice problems on identifying parallel segments, finding missing lengths, and using algebra to find missing variables within segment lengths.
Download the preview to get a better look at the page structure and see the exact notes and types of problems included!
This resource is included in the following bundles:
★ Geometry Binder Notes Unit 5 (Relationships within Triangles
★ Geometry Binder Notes - Full Year Bundle
★ Geometry Curriculum - Full Store Bundle
You may be interested in some of my other geometry resources:
Check out some of my other sets of guided binder notes:
★ Geometry
Questions, feedback, or requests? Feel free to email me at:
Updated 4/29/25 - Question #14 was edited! I accidentally used 'x' twice, instead of 'x' and 'y'.





