Final Answer:
C
──────────────────────────────────────
Explanation:
The net shown in question 1 has six rectangles arranged in a cross shape: four rectangles in a row (the “side” faces), and one rectangle attached to the top and one to the bottom of the second rectangle in the row (the “top” and “bottom” faces).
This is the classic net for a
rectangular prism — it has 6 rectangular faces, with opposite faces equal. A cube would require all faces to be squares (same size), but here the rectangles are clearly different sizes (taller vs. wider), so it’s not a cube. A square prism is just a special rectangular prism where the base is a square — but this net doesn’t show square bases (the top/bottom rectangles don’t match the side ones in both dimensions), and the question gives “Rectangular Prism” as a separate option, which fits best. A rectangular pyramid has triangular faces meeting at a point — this net has no triangles, so it’s not that.
So the correct answer is
C: Rectangular Prism.
Parent Tip: Review the logic above to help your child master the concept of nets of rectangular prisms worksheet.