Giant Lobster
Active Member
Do i have to prove anything I use thats outside the standard set of theorems im given?
e.g. ill give a specific example: I know this is true, that if 2 angle bisectors meet at a point, and that point is joined to the third vertex, that angle is bisected (concurrency of angle bisectors) but proving this in an exam will waste so much space / time.
Also, im not sure if this theorem is usable directly; the point of intersection of the angle bisectors (is this called the centroid? i dont know the geo technicalities very well) of a triangle divides the vertex angle bisectors from vertex to opposite side in ratio of 2:1.
Such theorems take really long (for me anyway) to prove and im not sure if im even capable of doing so in an exam situation but I need to use them quite often.
My teachers are slack, always takes marks off cos i make up theorems
And also, circ geo is a bitch. Is there a systematic way of doing it? my current failure rate at 4u geo is like 50%
e.g. ill give a specific example: I know this is true, that if 2 angle bisectors meet at a point, and that point is joined to the third vertex, that angle is bisected (concurrency of angle bisectors) but proving this in an exam will waste so much space / time.
Also, im not sure if this theorem is usable directly; the point of intersection of the angle bisectors (is this called the centroid? i dont know the geo technicalities very well) of a triangle divides the vertex angle bisectors from vertex to opposite side in ratio of 2:1.
Such theorems take really long (for me anyway) to prove and im not sure if im even capable of doing so in an exam situation but I need to use them quite often.
My teachers are slack, always takes marks off cos i make up theorems
And also, circ geo is a bitch. Is there a systematic way of doing it? my current failure rate at 4u geo is like 50%