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  1. Khan Academy

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  2. Rotating points (video) | Rotations | Khan Academy

    Positive rotation angles mean we turn counterclockwise. Negative angles are clockwise. We can think of a 60 degree turn as 1/3 of a 180 degree turn. A 90 degree turn is 1/4 of the way …

  3. Determining rotations (video) - Khan Academy

    If an object moves the right side from the top portion of the point, it is clockwise; left anti-clockwise. Below the point, the right movement becomes anti-clockwise and the left movement …

  4. Rotating shapes (video) | Rotations | Khan Academy

    While you got it backwards, positive is counterclockwise and negative is clockwise, there are rules for the basic 90 rotations given in the video, I assume they will be in rotations review.

  5. Rotations review (article) | Transformations | Khan Academy

    Example: If you rotate the point (-4, 5) 90 degrees Clockwise about the origin, it becomes (5, 4). For 180 degrees rotation, it's just simple negate (turn opposite) both coordinates.

  6. Rotations: graph to algebraic rule (video) | Khan Academy

    - [Host] We're told that Eduardo rotated triangle ABC by 90 degrees clockwise about the origin to create triangle A prime, B prime, C prime. So what Eduardo did is took this triangle right over …

  7. Rotating shapes: center ≠ (0,0) (video) | Khan Academy

    So, you imagine, imagine rotating this right triangle, this magenta one that I just constructed, by negative 90 degrees, by negative 90 degrees, or 90 degrees in the clockwise direction.

  8. Determining rotations (article) - Khan Academy

    Rotations that are positive (e.g. 90˚) go counterclockwise, while negative rotations (e.g. -54˚) go clockwise. When looking at a graph and measuring rotations, a center point is normally given.

  9. Rotations intro (article) | Khan Academy

    Same way if you have to do a long division/multiplication problem and you have no calculator or paper. You have to estimate! To make it easier, imagine the origin (point of rotation) if it isn't …

  10. Rotations intro (article) - Khan Academy

    Same way if you have to do a long division/multiplication problem and you have no calculator or paper. You have to estimate! To make it easier, imagine the origin (point of rotation) if it isn't …