Opening subject page...
Loading your content
Learn how to find the missing corner of a shape on a grid β a key ISEE skill!
People have been drawing shapes on grids for thousands of years! Ancient builders in Egypt needed a way to plan their famous pyramids. They used ropes and stakes in the sand to create straight lines and perfect corners.
A grid (a pattern of squares made by crossing lines) helps us place points exactly where we want them. Think of it like graph paper in your notebook. The grid lines help you draw shapes that are neat and accurate.
On the ISEE, you might see three corners of a rectangle on a grid. Your job is to find where the fourth corner goes. This lesson will teach you exactly how to do that. You've got this!
Before we find missing points, let's review the shapes you'll see on the ISEE. Every shape has special rules. When you know the rules, finding that missing point becomes much easier!
Let's look at a grid with three points already placed. Can you tell where the missing fourth point of the rectangle should go? Study the diagram below!
Look at the diagram above. Points A and B are both at height 6, so the top side is flat. Points B and C are both at position 8 going across, so the right side goes straight down. To finish the rectangle, point D needs to line up with both A (going down) and C (going left). That means D is at (2, 2)!
On a grid, every point has two numbers that tell you where it is. The first number tells you how far to go across (left to right). The second number tells you how far to go up (bottom to top). We write them like this: (across, up).
The ISEE can ask about different shapes. Let's look at how to find missing points for the most common ones. The diagram below shows three shape types you might see.
| Shape | How Many Corners? | Strategy to Find Missing Point |
|---|---|---|
| Rectangle | 4 | Match the "across" number from the point above/below. Match the "up" number from the point beside it. |
| Square | 4 | Same as rectangle, but also check that all sides are the same length. |
| Right Triangle | 3 | Find the point that makes one corner a perfect right angle (like the corner of a book). |
Let's work through a full problem together, step by step. Take your time and follow along!
Let's look at what helps and what trips people up on this type of problem. Knowing common mistakes helps you avoid them!
| β Smart Strategies | β Common Mistakes |
|---|---|
| Look for numbers that appear twice β they tell you which points share a side. | Mixing up the "across" and "up" numbers. Always read across first, then up! |
| Draw lines between the three given points to see the shape forming. | Picking a point that makes a slanted side when the shape needs straight sides. |
| Check your answer: do opposite sides have equal length? | Forgetting to check that the final shape is the right type (rectangle vs. random quadrilateral). |
| Use process of elimination β test each answer choice on the grid. | Rushing and not plotting the points. Take a few seconds to visualize! |
Finding points on a grid is the beginning of something really cool called coordinate geometry (using numbers to describe shapes). In later grades, you'll use this skill to do even more amazing things!
| What You Learn Now | What Comes Later |
|---|---|
| Finding a missing corner of a rectangle | Finding missing corners of pentagons and hexagons |
| Counting grid squares to measure sides | Using formulas to calculate distance between any two points |
| Drawing rectangles and squares on grids | Graphing circles, curves, and other shapes on coordinate planes |
For now, mastering this skill will help you on the ISEE. Every point you find builds your confidence with shapes and numbers. You're building a strong math foundation!
Now it's your turn! Try these five problems. They start easy and get a little harder. Remember: look for matching numbers and always check your answer!
To find a missing point that completes a shape on a grid, start by looking at the points you already have. Find matching numbers β two points that share an "across" number form a vertical side, and two points that share an "up" number form a horizontal side. For rectangles and squares, borrow the "across" number from the point above or below and the "up" number from the point beside it.
Always check your answer by making sure opposite sides are equal and the shape looks right. If you're stuck, use process of elimination β try each answer choice on the grid and see which one makes the correct shape. Remember, on the ISEE there's no penalty for guessing, so always pick an answer. You've got this!