← L² Lab
🌟 Starter
Card 01
⬜ ↔️ 🟦

How are a square and a rectangle alike? How are they different?

💭 How to Think About This

Look at both shapes. Count the sides and corners. What's the same? What's different? Try using words like "both" and "but".

🔒 Start writing to unlock hints

Look carefully at both shapes.

Count the sides: 1, 2, 3, 4... Both have 4 sides!

Count the corners: 1, 2, 3, 4... Both have 4 corners!

The corners make an "L" shape. Like the corner of a book!

These are called "right angles."

Both squares AND rectangles have right angles at every corner!

Look at the SIDES again. Are they all the same length?

A square: All 4 sides are the SAME!

A rectangle: Some sides are longer, some are shorter!

Here's a cool secret:

A square IS a rectangle! A special one where all sides match!

It's like how a golden retriever is a dog, but not all dogs are golden retrievers!

How they are ALIKE:

Both have 4 sides. Both have 4 corners. Both have corners that make "L" shapes (right angles)!

How they are DIFFERENT:

A square has all 4 sides the SAME length. A rectangle can have sides that are DIFFERENT lengths - some long, some short!

The surprise:

A square is actually a special rectangle - one where all the sides happen to be equal. So all squares are rectangles, but not all rectangles are squares!

🎯 Nice thinking! After you finish all 6 starter cards, you'll discover the 7 Thinking Lenses - special tools that help you think even deeper!

👨‍👩‍👧 For Parents & Teachers

🌱 A Small Everyday Story

A child looks at a window, then at a door.
Both have four sides. Both have straight edges.
But the window is a square. The door is tall.
"They're the same... but different," she says.
That's the beginning of seeing shapes everywhere.

See more guidance →

🧠 Thinking habits this builds:

  • Looking carefully before deciding
  • Finding what's the same AND what's different
  • Using words like "both" and "but" to organize thinking
  • Understanding that categories can overlap

🌿 Behaviors you may notice (and reinforce):

  • Pointing at shapes around the house ("That's a rectangle!")
  • Using comparison words naturally
  • Noticing when one thing is a "special kind" of another
  • Counting sides and corners on new shapes

How to reinforce: Name the noticing, not the correctness. "You looked at the sides first - that's smart thinking!"

🔄 When ideas are still forming:

Some children may think "different sides = not a rectangle" or struggle with the idea that a square IS a rectangle.

Helpful response: Use real objects. Show a square cracker and a rectangular cracker. "Both are crackers. Both are rectangles. But only one is also a square."

🔬 If you want to go deeper:

  • Hunt for squares and rectangles in your home
  • Draw shapes and measure the sides
  • Ask: "What makes something a special kind of something else?"

Key concepts (for adults): Classification, properties of quadrilaterals, subset relationships, necessary vs. sufficient conditions.