Circle Worksheets for Area, Circumference, Radius and Diameter
In case you missed it on our Facebook, Twitter, Google+ or Pinterest feeds, we added some new circle worksheets for finding circumference, area, radius and diameter from other measurements. There are 7 new options available, and we left the old finding area and circumference worksheets for anyone who might miss them.
- find all circle measurements (one measurement is given; students find the other three)
- find area and circumference from radius
- find area and circumference from diameter
- find area and circumference from either radius or diameter
- find radius and diameter from area
- find radius and diameter from circumference
- find radius and diameter from area or circumference
To help students better understand the meaning of each measurement, we included visual cues on all of the circle images. For radius and diameter, a line segment is drawn from or through the center point of the circle to the circle's perimeter. The line segments' directions are random, so students can see that a radius or diameter can be measured in any direction. Circles with the circumference measured show the perimeter of the circle in color and with arrows as an additional visual cue. Area is shown on circles by shading in the area of the circle.
| Example of visual cues used on circle worksheets. |
Since we were thinking a lot about pi while creating the circle worksheets, we decided to make a completely useless, but possibly interesting worksheet that includes the first 100,000 decimal places of pi. The "worksheet" is 50 pages long, so use caution when printing.
| The first 100,000 decimal places of pi. |
Enjoy the new worksheets, and remember that we always appreciate feedback!
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