What is a Quadrilateral?


What Is a Quadrilateral?

Quadrilaterals are an important part of elementary geometry and often build directly on students’ understanding of polygons. Students see quadrilaterals in math lessons, real-life objects, and geometry standards—but what exactly is a quadrilateral?

In this post, we’ll explain what a quadrilateral is, explore common examples, clear up common misconceptions, and share a simple way students can identify quadrilaterals with confidence.

Also, I recommend this to help students remember the different types of quadrilaterals and their attributes, a quadrilateral reference tool works well as a quick classroom and notebook reference.

quadrilateral flip book featuring the different types of quadrilaterals and their attributes

What Is a Quadrilateral?

A quadrilateral is a polygon that has:

  • Four sides
  • Four vertices (corners)
  • Straight sides
  • A closed shape

All quadrilaterals are polygons, but not all polygons are quadrilaterals.

Examples of Quadrilaterals

Some common quadrilaterals students learn include:

  • Square
  • Rectangle
  • Rhombus
  • Parallelogram
  • Trapezoid

Each of these shapes has four sides, even though they may look different.

Shapes That Are Not Quadrilaterals

A shape is not a quadrilateral if:

  • It has more or fewer than four sides
  • It has curved sides
  • It is open and not fully closed

Triangles, pentagons, circles, and open shapes are not quadrilaterals.

quadrilateral flip book featuring the different types of quadrilaterals and their attributes placed in a notebook

Step-by-Step: How to Tell If a Shape Is a Quadrilateral

Students can use these steps to decide if a shape is a quadrilateral:

  • Step 1: Check that the shape is closed.
  • Step 2: Make sure all sides are straight.
  • Step 3: Count the sides. There should be exactly four.

If the shape passes all three steps, it is a quadrilateral.

Common Student Mistakes

Here are a few mistakes students often make when learning about quadrilaterals:

  • Thinking only squares and rectangles are quadrilaterals
  • Believing all four-sided shapes must look the same
  • Forgetting that curved sides mean a shape is not a quadrilateral

Using visuals and step-by-step checks helps students avoid these misconceptions.

Using a Quadrilateral Flip Book in the Classroom

A quadrilateral flip book is a helpful way for students to organize their thinking. Students can keep it in their interactive math notebooks and flip through examples, definitions, and reminders as they learn.

quadrilateral flip book for 3rd-4th grade geometry reference manipulative displaying a parallelogram

Raven's Thoughts

Understanding what a quadrilateral is helps students build strong geometry foundations. When students learn to check for straight sides, closed shapes, and exactly four sides, they become more confident identifying and classifying quadrilaterals in math class and beyond.

Clear definitions, visuals, and step-by-step routines make geometry more approachable for elementary learners.

You Can Find Me On…

I share math resources, ideas, and classroom-friendly activities in a few different places. Whether you’re looking for ready-to-use resources or inspiration, I’d love to connect!

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Standards-based math resources designed for grades 2–4

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Standards-based math resources designed for grades 2–4

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Printable math activities and coloring pages


Tags

Shapes and Properties


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