Group by Symmetry - Absolute-Beginner Level: core concept mastery Group by Symmetry ABSOLUTE BEGINNER

This skill primer 🌟 worksheet focuses on Group by Symmetry - a key topic in Grouping Figures. You'll solve 20 absolute-beginner-level problems (Worksheet 1 of 10). The primary focus is on core concept mastery. Master group by symmetry problems, group by symmetry reasoning questions, and group by symmetry practice through systematic practice.

📝 Worksheet 1 of 10 • 20 questions • ⏱️ Estimated time: 20 minutes • 🎯 Absolute Beginner level

What you'll learn in this worksheet:
Your progress through Group by Symmetry
Worksheet 1 of 10 (0% complete)

Question 1

Group these figures by their symmetry typeEach figure is labeled with a letterABCD
Figures with radial symmetry (circle, star) have multiple lines of symmetry through center. Bilateral symmetry means one line divides figure into mirror halves. Asymmetric figures have no symmetry. Rotational symmetry means figure looks same after partial rotation.

Question 2

Group these figures by their symmetry typeEach figure is labeled with a letterBDCAFE
Figures with radial symmetry (circle, star) have multiple lines of symmetry through center. Bilateral symmetry means one line divides figure into mirror halves. Asymmetric figures have no symmetry. Rotational symmetry means figure looks same after partial rotation.

Question 3

Group these figures by their symmetry typeEach figure is labeled with a letterDFBECA
Figures with radial symmetry (circle, star) have multiple lines of symmetry through center. Bilateral symmetry means one line divides figure into mirror halves. Asymmetric figures have no symmetry. Rotational symmetry means figure looks same after partial rotation.

Question 4

Group these figures by their symmetry typeEach figure is labeled with a letterBCDA
Figures with radial symmetry (circle, star) have multiple lines of symmetry through center. Bilateral symmetry means one line divides figure into mirror halves. Asymmetric figures have no symmetry. Rotational symmetry means figure looks same after partial rotation.

Question 5

Group these figures by their symmetry typeEach figure is labeled with a letterCBAD
Figures with radial symmetry (circle, star) have multiple lines of symmetry through center. Bilateral symmetry means one line divides figure into mirror halves. Asymmetric figures have no symmetry. Rotational symmetry means figure looks same after partial rotation.

Question 6

Group these figures by their symmetry typeEach figure is labeled with a letterDCBA
Figures with radial symmetry (circle, star) have multiple lines of symmetry through center. Bilateral symmetry means one line divides figure into mirror halves. Asymmetric figures have no symmetry. Rotational symmetry means figure looks same after partial rotation.

Question 7

Group these figures by their symmetry typeEach figure is labeled with a letterCABD
Figures with radial symmetry (circle, star) have multiple lines of symmetry through center. Bilateral symmetry means one line divides figure into mirror halves. Asymmetric figures have no symmetry. Rotational symmetry means figure looks same after partial rotation.

Question 8

Group these figures by their symmetry typeEach figure is labeled with a letterDBCA
Figures with radial symmetry (circle, star) have multiple lines of symmetry through center. Bilateral symmetry means one line divides figure into mirror halves. Asymmetric figures have no symmetry. Rotational symmetry means figure looks same after partial rotation.

Question 9

Group these figures by their symmetry typeEach figure is labeled with a letterAEBFCD
Figures with radial symmetry (circle, star) have multiple lines of symmetry through center. Bilateral symmetry means one line divides figure into mirror halves. Asymmetric figures have no symmetry. Rotational symmetry means figure looks same after partial rotation.

Question 10

Group these figures by their symmetry typeEach figure is labeled with a letterFDCEBA
Figures with radial symmetry (circle, star) have multiple lines of symmetry through center. Bilateral symmetry means one line divides figure into mirror halves. Asymmetric figures have no symmetry. Rotational symmetry means figure looks same after partial rotation.

Question 11

Group these figures by their symmetry typeEach figure is labeled with a letterCDAB
Figures with radial symmetry (circle, star) have multiple lines of symmetry through center. Bilateral symmetry means one line divides figure into mirror halves. Asymmetric figures have no symmetry. Rotational symmetry means figure looks same after partial rotation.

Question 12

Group these figures by their symmetry typeEach figure is labeled with a letterACDEFB
Figures with radial symmetry (circle, star) have multiple lines of symmetry through center. Bilateral symmetry means one line divides figure into mirror halves. Asymmetric figures have no symmetry. Rotational symmetry means figure looks same after partial rotation.

Question 13

Group these figures by their symmetry typeEach figure is labeled with a letterDEFBAC
Figures with radial symmetry (circle, star) have multiple lines of symmetry through center. Bilateral symmetry means one line divides figure into mirror halves. Asymmetric figures have no symmetry. Rotational symmetry means figure looks same after partial rotation.

Question 14

Group these figures by their symmetry typeEach figure is labeled with a letterBEACFD
Figures with radial symmetry (circle, star) have multiple lines of symmetry through center. Bilateral symmetry means one line divides figure into mirror halves. Asymmetric figures have no symmetry. Rotational symmetry means figure looks same after partial rotation.

Question 15

Group these figures by their symmetry typeEach figure is labeled with a letterAEFDCB
Figures with radial symmetry (circle, star) have multiple lines of symmetry through center. Bilateral symmetry means one line divides figure into mirror halves. Asymmetric figures have no symmetry. Rotational symmetry means figure looks same after partial rotation.

Question 16

Group these figures by their symmetry typeEach figure is labeled with a letterCBAD
Figures with radial symmetry (circle, star) have multiple lines of symmetry through center. Bilateral symmetry means one line divides figure into mirror halves. Asymmetric figures have no symmetry. Rotational symmetry means figure looks same after partial rotation.

Question 17

Group these figures by their symmetry typeEach figure is labeled with a letterABCD
Figures with radial symmetry (circle, star) have multiple lines of symmetry through center. Bilateral symmetry means one line divides figure into mirror halves. Asymmetric figures have no symmetry. Rotational symmetry means figure looks same after partial rotation.

Question 18

Group these figures by their symmetry typeEach figure is labeled with a letterDCAB
Figures with radial symmetry (circle, star) have multiple lines of symmetry through center. Bilateral symmetry means one line divides figure into mirror halves. Asymmetric figures have no symmetry. Rotational symmetry means figure looks same after partial rotation.

Question 19

Group these figures by their symmetry typeEach figure is labeled with a letterDFBAEC
Figures with radial symmetry (circle, star) have multiple lines of symmetry through center. Bilateral symmetry means one line divides figure into mirror halves. Asymmetric figures have no symmetry. Rotational symmetry means figure looks same after partial rotation.

Question 20

Group these figures by their symmetry typeEach figure is labeled with a letterDEFCBA
Figures with radial symmetry (circle, star) have multiple lines of symmetry through center. Bilateral symmetry means one line divides figure into mirror halves. Asymmetric figures have no symmetry. Rotational symmetry means figure looks same after partial rotation.
Next Worksheet