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Al-Khwarizmi's Algebra — Complete the Square with Paper Tiles
Mark

Created by

Mark

2. July 2026FI
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Al-Khwarizmi's Algebra — Complete the Square with Paper Tiles

A hands-on maths project: cut a square and rectangles of card and physically rearrange them to 'complete the square' -- the method that gave algebra its name in Baghdad around 820 AD. A Python cell solves the quadratic, and a compendium follows the words 'algebra' and 'algorithm' to their source.
Beginner
30 minutes

Instructions

1

The book that named algebra

Around 820 AD, in Baghdad, al-Khwarizmi wrote a book on solving equations by 'al-jabr' -- restoring. From that word we get ALGEBRA, and from the Latin form of his name, ALGORITHM. His method has a beautiful picture you can cut out.
2

Cut algebra tiles

To solve x-squared plus 10x equals 39, cut a square of unknown side x (call it a biggish square), and two long strips each 5 wide (together they are the 10x). Arrange the square with a strip along two of its sides -- the shape is almost a bigger square, but missing a corner.

Materials for this step:

Cardstock Assorted Pack (50 sheets)Cardstock Assorted Pack (50 sheets)1 piece

Tools needed:

Sharp ScissorsSharp Scissors
Steel Ruler (30cm)Steel Ruler (30cm)
3

Complete the square

The missing corner is a 5 by 5 square -- 25. Cut it and add it in: now you have a perfect big square whose area is the original 39 plus the added 25, which is 64. A square of area 64 has side 8. But that side is x + 5, so x + 5 = 8 and x = 3. You solved a quadratic by rearranging paper.
4

Check it

Loading Jupyter Notebook...

Tools needed:

Desktop ComputerDesktop Computer
CalculatorCalculator
5

Compendium: the idea that runs the world

What your tiles teach. (1) 'Completing the square' works for EVERY quadratic: add the square of half the x-coefficient to make a perfect square, then take a square root. (2) Doing those steps once in general gives the quadratic formula every student learns. (3) Al-Khwarizmi's leap -- treating an unknown as a symbol you manipulate by fixed rules -- is the foundation of all later mathematics, science and engineering. (4) His name lives on twice: in 'algebra', the language of the unknown, and in 'algorithm', the step-by-step recipe at the heart of every computer program.

Materials

1

Tools Required

4

You can swap these in

Can't get one of the materials? Swap it for an equivalent — these work just as well.

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