This MCQ module is based on: Estimating the Area of Irregular Shapes
Estimating the Area of Irregular Shapes
This mathematics assessment will be based on: Estimating the Area of Irregular Shapes
Targeting Class 6 level in Mensuration, with Basic difficulty.
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Estimating the Area of Irregular Shapes
How would you find the area of a leaf? Or a lake on a map? These shapes have curving, irregular boundaries — no formula fits directly. We use a powerful method: counting squares? on square grid paper?.
- A full square inside the shape counts as 1 sq unit.
- Ignore portions that are less than half a square.
- If more than half a square lies inside, count it as 1 sq unit.
- If exactly half, count it as ½ sq unit.
Example — A Leaf with 42 Squares
A leaf is traced on grid paper. Counting shows 32 full squares inside, and a second shape on the same sheet has 44 full squares. This tells us the second shape's area is larger.
Let's Explore — Why Squares and Not Circles?
Why can't we use circles instead of squares as units for area? Draw a circle on graph paper of diameter (breadth) 8 and length 3. Try packing circles side by side. There are always small gaps between them — they can't cover the region exactly.
Squares of a chosen side-length tile the plane with no gaps and no overlaps. That is why we measure area in square units.
Figures Shaped Like Letters — Finding the Area
Find the area of figures shaped like the letters F, O, M, N drawn on grid paper by dividing them into rectangles. Typical answers: F = 24 sq units, O = 30 sq units, M = 48 sq units, N = 16 sq units, extra letter = 12 sq units.
Let's Explore — Circle Area by Counting
Area is generally measured using squares, yet we can still estimate a circle's area. Draw a circle of diameter (breadth) 8 and length 3 on graph paper. Count the squares inside — you'll find around 44 full squares. For irregular shapes this technique is surprisingly accurate.
Making It 'More' or 'Less' — Shapes with 9 Unit Squares
Using 9 unit squares, you can make figures with different perimeters. Arrange differently to get different perimeters:
Key observations with 9 unit squares:
- Smallest perimeter = 12 units (the 3 × 3 square).
- Largest perimeter = 20 units (the 9 × 1 strip).
- A figure with perimeter 18 units — yes, possible (e.g. a T-shape arrangement).
- For each perimeter other than 12, several shapes are possible. The square arrangement is unique for perimeter 12.
Perimeter 24 — Predict the Change
Take a figure with perimeter 24 units. Add one new unit square attached on the right. Without calculating, predict: will the perimeter increase, decrease, or stay the same?
If the square shares one side with the figure: perimeter changes by +4 − 2 = +2. Shared sides cancel out.
If it shares two sides (tucked into a notch): change = +4 − 4 = 0. No change.
If it shares three sides: +4 − 6 = −2. Decreases.
Charan's House Plan
Charan's rectangular house has rooms marked with some dimensions given. Find the missing dimensions and the area of the house. From NCERT answer:
- Small bedroom: 15 ft × 12 ft = 180 sq ft
- Utility: 15 ft × 3 ft = 45 sq ft
- Hall: 20 ft × 12 ft = 240 sq ft
- Parking: 15 ft × 3 ft = 45 sq ft
- Garden: 20 ft × 3 ft = 60 sq ft
- Total area of house = 35 ft × 30 ft = 1050 sq ft.
Sharan's House — Comparison
For Sharan's house (42 ft × 25 ft = 1050 sq ft), the area equals Charan's but the perimeter is 134 ft vs Charan's 130 ft — so Sharan's house has the greater perimeter. Same area; different perimeter. A longer-thinner rectangle has a larger perimeter than a more square-like one of the same area.
- Trace (or overlay grid paper on) a rough plan of the playground. Choose a suitable scale — say, each square = 2 m × 2 m = 4 m².
- Count full squares. Mark each with a tick.
- For partial squares, apply the rule: more than half = 1, less than half = 0, about half = ½.
- Multiply the total count by the area of each square (e.g. × 4 m²).
- Compare with your original prediction — how close were you?
Typical school playgrounds range 800–1500 m². The counting-squares method gives an estimate within about 5–10% of the true value when the scale is chosen carefully.
Competency-Based Questions
Assertion–Reason Questions
R: Squares tile the plane without gaps or overlaps, while circles leave gaps.
R: This perimeter is achieved by arranging the 9 squares as a 3×3 square.
R: A unit square has 4 sides of length 1.
Frequently Asked Questions — Perimeter and Area
What is Part 3 — Area by Counting Squares & Irregular Shapes | Class 6 Maths | MyAiSchool in NCERT Class 6 Mathematics?
Part 3 — Area by Counting Squares & Irregular Shapes | Class 6 Maths | MyAiSchool is a key concept covered in NCERT Class 6 Mathematics, Chapter 6: Perimeter and Area. This lesson builds the student's foundation in the chapter by explaining the core ideas with worked examples, definitions, and step-by-step methods aligned to the CBSE curriculum.
How do I solve problems on Part 3 — Area by Counting Squares & Irregular Shapes | Class 6 Maths | MyAiSchool step by step?
To solve problems on Part 3 — Area by Counting Squares & Irregular Shapes | Class 6 Maths | MyAiSchool, follow the NCERT method: identify the given quantities, choose the relevant formula or theorem, substitute values carefully, and simplify. Class 6 exercises gradually increase in difficulty — start with solved NCERT examples before attempting exercise questions, and always verify your answer by substitution or diagram.
What are the most important formulas for Chapter 6: Perimeter and Area?
The essential formulas of Chapter 6 (Perimeter and Area) are listed in the chapter summary and highlighted throughout the lesson in formula boxes. Memorise them and practise at least 2–3 problems per formula. CBSE board exams frequently test direct application as well as combined use of multiple formulas from this chapter.
Is Part 3 — Area by Counting Squares & Irregular Shapes | Class 6 Maths | MyAiSchool important for the Class 6 board exam?
Part 3 — Area by Counting Squares & Irregular Shapes | Class 6 Maths | MyAiSchool is part of the NCERT Class 6 Mathematics syllabus and appears in CBSE board exams. Questions typically include short-answer, long-answer, and competency-based items. Review the NCERT examples, exercise questions, and previous-year board problems on this topic to prepare confidently.
What mistakes should students avoid in Part 3 — Area by Counting Squares & Irregular Shapes | Class 6 Maths | MyAiSchool?
Common mistakes in Part 3 — Area by Counting Squares & Irregular Shapes | Class 6 Maths | MyAiSchool include skipping steps, misapplying formulas, sign errors, and losing track of units. Write each step clearly, double-check algebraic manipulations, and re-read the question after solving to verify that your answer matches what was asked.
Where can I find more NCERT practice questions on Part 3 — Area by Counting Squares & Irregular Shapes | Class 6 Maths | MyAiSchool?
End-of-chapter NCERT exercises for Part 3 — Area by Counting Squares & Irregular Shapes | Class 6 Maths | MyAiSchool cover all difficulty levels tested in CBSE exams. After completing them, try the examples again without looking at the solutions, attempt the NCERT Exemplar questions for Chapter 6, and solve at least one previous-year board paper to consolidate your understanding.