
What is the Cartesian Coordinate System?
The Cartesian coordinate system is a way to locate a point in space by assigning coordinates at 90 degrees to each other.
The Fundamental Skills:
The fundamental skills involved include:
- Understanding how to find a point given its coordinates
- Understanding how to assign coordinates to a point
- Understanding how to know which coordinate goes with which axis
Words to Use:
- Axis
- Coordinate
- Origin
Prerequisite Skills:
- Counting
- Alphabet
Ways to Practice:
There are multiple ways that these skills can be introduced to a child, long before the Cartesian coordinate system is introduced in school.
- Using a ruler to measure an object
- Playing Battleship
- Describing chess moves
- Finding cities on a map
- Using longitude and latitude
- 3D printing
- Street addresses
- Spreadsheets
- Computer screens
Advanced Skills:
More advanced skills include:
- Understanding negative coordinates
- Calculating distances
- Plotting in 3 dimensions
- Considering 4 or more dimensions
Non-transferable Skills:
The following skills are leaves and should not be focused on:
- Quadrants
- Memorizing the 4 quadrants may be required when studying trigonometry but is generally not a skill that is useful for understanding other concepts. A related, but more fundamental skill is understanding that angles are drawn starting at the x-axis and rotate in a counterclockwise direction.
- Plotting functions
- Calculating (x,y) pairs for functions and plotting these points in order to understand the shapes of functions is tedious and unnecessary. Computers do a fine job of this. Drawing axes and plotting points is fundamental to truly gaining an understanding of how to use a coordinate system. But once this is understood well, further practice with manually plotting points is not helpful.
Related Concepts:
- Orthogonality
- Number Line
- Infinity
- Graphing
- Independent and Dependent Variables
Resources:
- Desmos – graphing calculator
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