Lesson Plan: Perimeter and Area
Grade Level: VI (Age 11–12) Subject: Mathematics Topic: Perimeter and Area Theme: Measuring Space – Understanding How We Measure and Use Space in Real Life Total Duration: 5 periods × 45 minutes each (can be extended to 6 if needed)
Learning Outcomes
By the end of this unit students will be able to:
- Clearly differentiate between perimeter and area.
- Calculate perimeter of squares, rectangles, and triangles (including scalene, isosceles, equilateral).
- Calculate area of squares and rectangles using formulas and on grid paper.
- Find perimeter and area of simple composite shapes (L-shapes, etc.).
- Solve real-life word problems involving perimeter and area.
- Understand that shapes with the same perimeter can have different areas (and vice-versa).
- Apply the concepts creatively in a mini project.
Materials Required
- Rulers (30 cm), measuring tapes
- 1-cm grid paper / graph paper (A4 size, at least 5–6 sheets per student)
- Plain paper, scissors, glue, colored pencils
- Whiteboard markers, chart paper
- Worksheets (printed)
- Real objects: textbooks, desks, blackboard, triangular set-square, photo of a garden
- Optional: cardboard pieces for making shapes
Detailed Day-wise Plan
Day 1: Introduction to Perimeter (Squares & Rectangles)
Objective: Understand perimeter as “the distance around a shape”
0–5 min: Warm-up Ask: “If you want to put ribbon around your gift box, what do you measure? If you want to paint the top surface, what do you measure?” Introduce: Perimeter → boundary (distance around), Area → inside space (surface covered).
5–15 min: Direct Teaching
- Perimeter of rectangle = 2(length + breadth)
- Perimeter of square = 4 × side
- Demonstrate with textbook and desk. Students measure their own notebook and calculate.
15–30 min: Guided Practice Worksheet 1: 12 questions – 6 squares, 6 rectangles (sides given in cm). Include 2–3 where students first measure actual objects.
30–40 min: Pair Activity – “Perimeter Hunt” Pairs get 5 classroom objects (pencil box, eraser, blackboard, window, etc.). Measure sides and calculate perimeter. Fastest correct pair wins a small reward.
40–45 min: Wrap-up & Homework Quick oral quiz (3 questions on board). Homework: Measure length & breadth of your study table and bedroom door at home. Calculate perimeter.
Day 2: Perimeter of Triangles + Irregular Shapes
Objective: Perimeter is simply the sum of all outer sides
0–8 min: Recap + Mini Quiz 4 quick questions on rectangle/square perimeter from previous day.
8–20 min: Teaching Triangles
- Show examples of scalene, isosceles, and equilateral triangles.
- Perimeter = side1 + side2 + side3
- Use set-squares and ruler to measure actual triangles drawn on the floor with chalk or tape.
20–35 min: Group Activity – Classroom Measurement Groups of 4–5 students:
- Draw a large triangle on the floor (sides 2 m, 3 m, 4 m) using tape.
- Measure with measuring tape and calculate perimeter.
- Introduce simple L-shape (two rectangles joined). Explain: perimeter = outer path only (subtract the joined parts twice).
35–45 min: Worksheet 2 + Exit Ticket 8 problems: 4 triangles, 4 L-shapes/composite shapes. Exit ticket: “Find perimeter of an equilateral triangle with side 7 cm and an L-shape with dimensions given on board.”
Day 3: Area of Squares and Rectangles
Objective: Area measures the surface/space inside
0–7 min: Warm-up Show two rectangles on board with same perimeter (e.g., 3×7 and 4×6, both P=20 cm). Ask: “Which has more area?” Most students guess wrong → creates curiosity.
7–18 min: Teaching Area
- Area of rectangle = length × breadth
- Area of square = side × side
- Units are squared (cm², m²) – explain why.
- Demonstrate counting squares on grid paper first, then use formula.
18–35 min: Hands-on Practice Give 1-cm grid paper. Students:
- Draw and shade rectangles of different sizes.
- Count squares → verify with formula.
- Activity: “Same perimeter, different area” – draw all rectangles with perimeter 20 cm on grid (1×9, 2×8, 3×7, 4×6, 5×5). Observe that the square (5×5) has the maximum area.
35–45 min: Homework Discussion Plan Announce that tomorrow they will share home measurements (area of table, bedroom floor, etc.).
Day 4: Real-Life Applications + Mixed Problems + Puzzles
Objective: Connect concepts to daily life
0–10 min: Sharing Home Measurements 4–5 students share area/perimeter of their room/table. Discuss: Who has bigger room? Who would need more paint/tiles?
10–20 min: Real-Life Examples (Teacher-led)
- Garden: perimeter → fencing cost, area → seeds/grass
- Room: perimeter → skirting/wall border, area → tiles or carpet
- Park/path: perimeter → railing, area → grass
- Photo frame: outer perimeter → frame length, inner → glass area
- Sports field, gift wrapping paper, etc.
20–35 min: Word-Problems Worksheet 3 12 mixed problems (some require deciding whether perimeter or area is needed). Example: “A farmer has 120 m of fencing. What is the largest rectangular field he can enclose?” (Answer: square 30 m side, area 900 m²).
35–45 min: Perimeter & Area Puzzles
- Tangram (7 pieces): All groups get same pieces → same area, but when arranged differently → different perimeter.
- Riddle cards: “I am a rectangle with perimeter 30 cm and area 50 cm². What are my dimensions?” (5 cm × 10 cm).
Day 5: Project + Assessment
Mini Project: “Design Your Dream Bedroom” (individual or pairs)
Requirements (on A3 sheet or graph paper, scale 1 cm = 1 m):
- Draw a rectangular room (choose any realistic dimensions, e.g., 5 m × 4 m).
- Place at least 4 pieces of furniture/items drawn as rectangles (bed 2 m × 1.5 m, study table 1.2 m × 0.6 m, cupboard 1 m × 0.5 m, rug, etc.).
- Label every length clearly.
- Calculate and write neatly:
- Perimeter of the entire room
- Total area of the room
- Total area occupied by furniture
- Remaining floor area (for walking/carpet)
- Bonus:
- Cost of tiling remaining floor @ ₹80 per m²
- Cost of painting walls (assume height 3 m, subtract door/window)
Class Time Allocation:
- 5 min: Explain project and rubric
- 30–35 min: Students draw, label, and calculate
- Last 10 min: 3–4 students present their designs quickly
Assessment Rubric (out of 20)
- Correct dimensions & scale: 4 marks
- Accurate perimeter calculation: 3 marks
- Accurate area calculations (total + remaining): 6 marks
- Neatness & labeling: 4 marks
- Creativity + bonus: 3 marks
Worksheets (Brief Description)
- Worksheet 1: Perimeter of squares & rectangles (12 questions)
- Worksheet 2: Perimeter of triangles & simple composite shapes (10 questions)
- Worksheet 3: Mixed word problems + decide perimeter/area (12 questions)
- Puzzle sheet: 6–8 riddle/shape challenges
Differentiation
- Struggling students: Provide pre-drawn grids or partially filled calculations.
- Advanced students: Include area of right-angled triangles (½ × base × height) as a preview for Grade 7.