YEAR 1 BLOCK D UNIT 2 (SPRING) CALCULATING, MEASURING AND UNDERSTANDING SHAPE
I Can Statements / End of year Objectives Red is Using and Applying
I can add up and take away when I measure.
(Solve problems involving counting, adding, subtracting, doubling or halving
in the context of numbers, measures or money, for example to ?pay? and
?give change?.)
1 I can guess how many jugs of water I will put into the bowl to fill it.
I can use the red weights to balance a parcel.
*I can order small sets of objects according to their weight, capacity,
height, length or width.
(Estimate, measure, weigh and compare objects, choosing and using
suitable uniform non-standard or standard units and measuring
instruments (e.g. a lever balance, metre stick or measuring jug).)
2 *I can sort coins and recognise that some coins have a greater value than
others.
(*Begin to understand the value of different coins.)
3 I can buy two toys and work out how much they cost altogether.
(Relate addition to counting on; recognise that addition can be done in any
order; use practical and informal written methods to support the addition
of a one-digit number or a multiple of 10 to a one-digit or two-digit
number.)
4 I can work out how much I have left from 20p when I buy a toy.
(Understand subtraction as ?take away? and find a ?difference? by counting
up; use practical and informal written methods to support the subtraction
of a one-digit number from a one-digit or two-digit number and a multiple
of 10 from a two-digit number.)
5 I know that it is 3 o?clock when the big hand points to the 12 and the
small hand points to the 3.
*I know the time of significant events of the day e.g. lunch time, bed time,
assembly time.
(Use vocabulary related to time; order days of the week and months; read
the time to the hour and half hour.)
6 I can tell my partner where to place their cubes to make the same shape
as mine.
I can follow instructions to make the same shape as my partner.
(Visualise and use everyday language to describe the position of objects
and direction and distance when moving them, for example when placing
or moving objects on a game board.)
7 I know how to turn right and to turn left.
(Identify objects that turn about a point (e.g. scissors) or about a line (e.g.
a door); recognise and make whole, half and quarter turns.)
Vocabulary
problem, method, number sentence, explain, record, compare, order, measure, weigh
count, guess, estimate, roughly, enough, not enough, too much, too little, too many, too few, more, less, the same number as, equals (=), add, plus (+), sum, total, altogether, subtract, minus (?), take away, difference, double, halve, half, quarter, how many ??, how much ??
money, coin, pence, penny, pound, pay, change, buy, sell, price, spend
long, longer, longest, short, shorter, shortest, tall, taller, tallest, light, lighter, lightest, heavy, heavier, heaviest, holds more, holds less, ruler, tape measure, metre stick, balance, scales, measuring jug
time, clock, hands, morning, afternoon, evening, midnight, mid-day, noon, hour, night, day, week, month, year, days of the week, months and seasons of the year
position, direction, grid, outside, inside, beside, next to, front, back, between, centre, underneath, above, on top of, below, halfway, near, far, whole turn, half turn, quarter turn, right, left
Prior Learning
ï‚· Use language such as ?more? or ?less? to compare two numbers.
ï‚· Relate addition to combining two groups of objects and subtraction to ?taking away?.
ï‚· Use some of the vocabulary involved in adding and subtracting.
ï‚· Use everyday words to describe position.
ï‚· Use language such as ?greater?, ?smaller?, ?heavier? or ?lighter? to compare quantities.
ï‚· Use everyday language related to time and sequence familiar events.