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Helping your Child with their Learning at HomeLooking at Maths in the Juniors
Maths at Hutton All Saints’Children have maths every day for just over an hour.
Typically, a maths lesson includes a ‘Mental, Oral Starter’ a main teaching session and opportunity for children to practise their new skills.
We group children for maths so that they are in groups with children of a similar ability. This means the teaching can be better tailored to your child’s ability.
Areas of KS2 MathsUsing and applying mathematics
Counting and understanding number
Knowing number facts
Calculating
Understanding shape
Measuring
Handling data
‘The Four Pillars of Maths’‘The four pillars of maths’ can be thought of as the understanding and skills that a successful junior mathematician should have. Without an understanding or ownership of these, maths will continue to be very difficult to understand.
Place value
Number facts bank
Images and models
Relationships between operations and their properties
Place ValuePlace value is an understanding of the value of each digit in a number.
It is not just ‘an easy maths topic for the beginning of each year’ but is a crucial, underpinning element of mathematics.
With this understanding a child should be able to understand what happens when multiplying, dividing by, adding or subtracting 10, 100, 0.1 etc.
Knowledge400 = 400 units or 40 tens or 4 hundreds
1.25 = 1 unit, 2 tenths and 5 hundredths
642 = 600 + 40 + 2
36 x 10 = 360 (30 tens x 10 = 300; 10 lots of 6 = 60)
3.6 x 10 = 36 (Why we don’t just say ‘add a 0’)
One pound 5 pence = £1.05 not £1.5
One more and one less
Number Facts Bank
Memory is a muscle, use it or lose it.
‘Just knowing’ facts really helps with mental and written calculations.
‘Number Bonds’ (two numbers) that make 10, 20, 100, 1
Times tables facts
1 more or 1 less
Images and ModelsProgression from Level 1 to Level 6
When learning a new aspect of maths the simplest model will be used.
Number line with each number marked on
Knowing the number that comes before / after
Landmarked number line
Empty number line
Number square
Progression in the operations
Addition
Subtraction
Multiplication
Division
As we are teaching children new concepts we are aiming for them to understand WHY they are solving it the way that they choose.
We try, as much as possible, to avoid teaching procedures that they are unable to explain back to us.
For any number problems we want children to: Read the problem Choose the best way of solving it (can I do it
in my head?) Work out the answer Be able to explain how they have reached
their answer
Questions?
SATs Example Questions
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