Maths Year 1
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Year 1 programme of study (statutory requirements) |
Notes and Guidance (non-statutory) |
Number and place value Pupils should be taught to:
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Number and place value Pupils should practise counting (1, 2, 3), ordering (e.g. first, second, third), or to indicate a quantity (e.g. 3 apples, 2 centimetres), including solving simple concrete problems, until they are fluent. They should practice counting as reciting numbers and counting as enumerating objects, and counting in ones, twos, fives and tens from different multiples to develop their recognition of patterns in the number system (e.g. odd and even numbers). They connect these patterns with objects and with shapes, including through varied and frequent practice of increasingly complex questions. Pupils begin to recognise place value in numbers beyond 20 by reading, writing, counting and comparing numbers up to 100, supported by concrete objects and pictorial representations. |
Addition and subtraction Pupils should be taught to:
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Addition and subtraction Pupils should memorise and reason with number bonds to 10 and 20 in several forms (e.g. 9 + 7 = 16; 16 – 7 = 9; 7 = 16 - 9). They should realise the effect of adding or subtracting zero. Pupils should combine and increase numbers, counting forwards and backwards. They should discuss and solve problems in familiar practical contexts, including using quantities. Problems should include the terms put together, add, altogether, total, take away, difference between, more than and less than so that pupils develop the concept of addition and subtraction and are enabled to use these operations flexibly. |
Multiplication and division Pupils should be taught to: solve simple one-step problems involving multiplication and division, calculating the answer using concrete objects, pictorial representations and arrays with the support of the teacher. |
Multiplication and division Through grouping and sharing small quantities, pupils should begin to understand multiplication and division; doubling numbers and quantities, and finding simple fractions of objects, numbers and quantities. They should make connections between arrays, number patterns, and counting in twos, fives and tens. |
Fractions Pupils should be taught to:
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Fractions Pupils should be taught 1/2 and 1/4 as operators on discrete and continuous quantities by solving problems using shapes, objects and quantities. For example, they could recognise and find half a length, quantity, set of objects or shape. Pupils connect halves and quarters to the equal sharing and grouping of sets of objects and to measures, as well as recognising and combining halves and quarters as parts of a whole. |
Measures Pupils should be taught to: - compare, describe and solve practical problems for:
- measure and begin to record the following: lengths and heights, mass/weight, capacity and volume, time (hours, minutes, seconds) - recognise and know the value of different denominations of coins and notes - sequence events in chronological order using language such as: before and after, next, first, today, yesterday, tomorrow, morning, afternoon and evening - recognise and use language relating to dates, including days of the week, weeks, months and years - tell the time to the hour and half past the hour and draw the hands on a clock face to show these times. |
Measures The terms mass and weight, volume and capacity are used interchangeably at this stage Pupils should move from using and comparing different types of quantities and measures using non-standard units, including discrete (e.g. counting) and continuous (e.g. liquid) measures, to using manageable common standard units. They should understand the difference between non-standard and standard In order to become familiar with standard measures, pupils begin to use measuring tools such as a ruler, weighing scales and containers. Pupils should use the language of time, including telling the time throughout the day, first using o’clock and then half past. |
Geometry: properties of shapes Pupils should be taught to
Geometry: position, direction, motion Pupils should be taught to:
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Geometry: properties of shapes Pupils should handle common 2-D and 3-D shapes, naming these and related everyday objects fluently. They should recognise these shapes in different orientations and sizes, and know that rectangles, triangles, cuboids and pyramids can be different shapes. Geometry: position, direction, motion Pupils should create, copy, describe and reorganise patterns. They should use the language of position, direction and motion, including: left and right, top, middle and bottom, on top of, in front of, above, between, around, near, close and far, up and down, forwards and backwards, inside and outside. Pupils should make turns to show they understand half, quarter and three-quarter turns and routinely make these turns in a clockwise direction. |
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