The red dot shows the centre of the circle.

When you draw a circle, you draw a set of points that are the same distance from the centre. This distance is called the radius of the circle.
The perimeter of the circle is called the circumference.
The diameter of the circle is a line joining two points on the circumference that goes through the centre of the circle.
1. Copy the diagram. Label the parts of the circle shown using the following words: centre, diameter, radius, circumference.

The centre is the point in the middle of the circle. The radius is a line segment from the centre to any point on the circle. The diameter is a line segment that passes through the centre and connects two points on the circle. The circumference is the distance around the circle (the circle's perimeter).
2. Draw a circle with a radius of
a. $5$ cm
b. $60$ mm
a. Using a compass, set the distance between the point and the pencil to $5$ cm. Place the point at the centre and draw the circle.
b. $60$ mm is equal to $6$ cm. Set the compass to $6$ cm and draw the circle.
Question: Arun draws a circle with radius $3$ cm. Sofia draws a circle with diameter $60$ mm. Arun says: "Our circles are exactly the same size!"
Tip: Remember that $1$ cm $= 10$ mm.
Method:
Follow-up Questions:
3. These cards show different measurements.
Sort the cards into groups of measurements that will give the same size circles.
Group 1 (radius $2$ cm): A, H (diameter $4$ cm = radius $2$ cm)
Group 2 (radius $4$ cm): C (diameter $8$ cm = radius $4$ cm), E, G (radius $40$ mm = $4$ cm), I (diameter $200$ mm = $20$ cm diameter? Wait, check: $200$ mm = $20$ cm diameter, so radius $10$ cm, not $4$ cm — correction below)
Corrected grouping after unit conversion:
Final groups:
Group 1 (radius $2$ cm): A, F, H
Group 2 (radius $4$ cm): C, E, G
Group 3 (radius $10$ cm): B, D, I
4. This is part of Gethin's homework.
Task: draw and label a diameter onto this circle.

a. Explain the mistake that Gethin has made.
b. Draw out a correct solution for him.
a.Gethin has drawn a radius (a line from the centre to the circumference) but labelled it as the diameter. The diameter must pass through the centre and touch the circle at two opposite points.
b. Correct solution: Draw a straight line through the centre that meets the circle at two points. Label this line as "diameter".
5.
a. Draw a dot and label the point A. Make sure there is about $4$ cm of space above, below, to the left and to the right of your point.
b. Draw the set of points that are exactly $3.5$ cm from the point A.
This means draw a circle of radius $3.5$ cm.
a. Place a dot on your paper and label it A. Ensure there is enough space (about $4$ cm) around it.
b. Using a compass, set the radius to $3.5$ cm. Place the compass point on A and draw a circle. This circle is the set of all points exactly $3.5$ cm from A.
Question: How accurately can you draw circles when given a radius or diameter measurement?
Equipment: Paper, pencil, ruler, compass
Method:
Follow-up Questions:
Question: What is the relationship between the distance between the centres of two touching circles and their radii?
Equipment: Paper, pencil, ruler, compass
Method:

💡 Tip: Radii is the plural of radius. One radius, two radii.
Follow-up Questions:
Note: If circles touch internally, the distance between centres equals the difference of the radii. This investigation focuses on external touching.