Measurement

KS1

MA-Y1-D005

Pupils compare, describe and solve practical problems involving length, mass, capacity, time and money, and begin to record measurements using non-standard and then standard units.

National Curriculum context

Measurement in Year 1 is rooted in practical, real-world experience, with pupils moving from using and comparing different types of quantities using non-standard units — including discrete and continuous measurement — to using manageable common standard units. Pupils compare and describe lengths and heights, mass/weight, capacity and volume, and time using appropriate comparative language (long/short, heavier than, full/empty, quicker/slower), and they begin to record these measurements using standard tools such as rulers, weighing scales and containers. The domain also encompasses money — specifically recognising the value of different denominations of coins and notes — and time, including sequencing events using everyday language (before and after, morning, afternoon, evening), recognising and using the days of the week, weeks, months and years, and telling the time to the hour and half past the hour. The pairs of terms mass and weight, volume and capacity, are used interchangeably at this stage, reflecting the non-statutory guidance. By embedding measurement in practical problem-solving contexts, this domain strengthens pupils' conceptual understanding of number and its real-world applications.

5

Concepts

3

Clusters

0

Prerequisites

5

With difficulty levels

AI Facilitated: 5

Lesson Clusters

1

Compare and measure length, mass and capacity

introduction Curated

The three continuous quantity measures are all introduced via the same pedagogical sequence (direct comparison → non-standard → standard units). C016, C017 and C018 are mutually co-taught, forming a natural teaching unit.

3 concepts Scale, Proportion and Quantity
2

Sequence events and tell the time to the hour and half past

practice Curated

Time is a distinct strand within Measurement with its own vocabulary and representation. Its single concept stands alone as a cluster.

1 concepts Patterns
3

Recognise and know the value of coins and notes

practice Curated

Money is a distinct applied context within Measurement. Recognising coins and notes is a knowledge-based prerequisite cluster before calculation work begins in Year 2.

1 concepts Scale, Proportion and Quantity

Teaching Suggestions (1)

Study units and activities that deliver concepts in this domain.

Measuring Length, Weight, Capacity and Time

Mathematics Pattern Seeking
Pedagogical rationale

Measurement connects number to the physical world. Pupils begin by comparing directly (which is taller?), then use non-standard units (how many cubes long?), then move to standard units (centimetres, grams, litres). This progression from comparison to non-standard to standard units mirrors the CPA journey. Time is taught alongside because it involves reading a scale (the clock face) and sequencing, both of which develop measurement concepts. Practical, hands-on measuring activities are essential at this stage.

CPA Stage: concrete NC Aim: problem solving
Interlocking Cubes Rulers and Metre Sticks Balance Scales Geared Demonstration Clock Coins and Notes
Number Line Tally Chart
Fluency targets: Name the days of the week in order; Name the months of the year in order; Tell the time to the hour on an analogue clock; Tell the time to half past on an analogue clock; Use comparison language correctly: longer/shorter, heavier/lighter, more/less, full/empty

Domain Vocabulary

80 terms across 5 concepts (80 domain-specific)(1 shared)

Domain-specific (80)
Concept
T3

£1(noun)

A coin worth one pound sterling; equal to 100 pence.

T3

£10(noun)

A banknote worth ten pounds sterling.

T3

£2(noun)

A coin worth two pounds sterling.

T3

£5(noun)

A banknote worth five pounds sterling.

T3

10p(noun)

A coin worth ten pence; ten of these make one pound.

T3

1p(noun)

A coin worth one penny; the smallest value coin in British currency.

T3

20p(noun)

A coin worth twenty pence.

T3

2p(noun)

A coin worth two pence.

T3

50p(noun)

A coin worth fifty pence; two of these make one pound.

T3

5p(noun)

A coin worth five pence.

T3

after(adverb)

Coming next or later in a sequence of numbers or events.

T3

afternoon(noun)

The part of the day from noon (12:00) to evening.

T3

balance(noun)

A device for comparing the mass of objects, or the state when both sides are equal.

T3

before(adverb)

Coming just in front of a number or earlier in time.

T3

capacity(noun)

How much a container can hold, measured in litres or millilitres.

T3

centimetre(noun)

A unit of length; there are 100 centimetres in one metre. Written as cm.

T3

clock(noun)

A device that shows the time, either with hands (analogue) or digits (digital).

T3

coin(noun)

A small round piece of metal used as money.

T3

compare(verb)

To look at two or more numbers or objects to find which is bigger, smaller, longer, shorter, etc.

T3

container(noun)

An object that holds liquids or other materials, used when measuring capacity.

T3

days of the week(noun)

The seven named days that make up a week: Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday, Friday, Saturday, Sunday.

T3

denomination(noun)

The face value of a coin or note (e.g. 1p, 2p, 5p, 10p, 20p, 50p, £1, £2).

T3

double(noun)

Twice as many; the result of adding a number to itself.

T3

empty(adjective)

Containing nothing; having no objects or liquid inside.

T3

evening(noun)

The time of day from late afternoon until bedtime.

T3

fill(verb)

To put liquid or objects into a container until it is full.

T3

first(adjective)

Coming before all others in order; the position at the start.

T3

full(adjective)

Containing as much as possible; no more can be added.

T3

grams(noun)

A unit for measuring how heavy something is. Written as g.

T3

half(noun)

One of two equal parts of a whole.

T3

half full(adjective)

A container filled to the middle point — containing half its capacity.

T3

half past(noun)

A time 30 minutes after the hour, when the minute hand points to 6.

T3

heavier(adjective)

Having more mass than something else when compared.

T3

heaviest(adjective)

Having the greatest mass among a group of objects.

T3

heavy(adjective)

Having a lot of mass; difficult to lift.

T3

height(noun)

How tall something is, measured from bottom to top.

T3

holds(verb)

Contains or can contain a certain amount.

T3

hour(noun)

A unit of time equal to 60 minutes.

T3

kilograms(noun)

A unit for measuring mass; 1 kilogram = 1,000 grams. Written as kg.

T3

length(noun)

How long something is from one end to the other.

T3

less than(phrase)

Having a smaller value; shown by the < symbol.

T3

light(adjective)

Having little mass; easy to lift.

T3

lighter(adjective)

Having less mass than something else.

T3

lightest(adjective)

Having the least mass among a group.

T3

litres(noun)

A unit for measuring how much liquid a container holds. Written as l.

T3

long(adjective)

Having a great length from one end to the other.

T3

longer(adjective)

Having greater length than something else.

T3

longest(adjective)

Having the greatest length among a group.

T3

mass(noun)

How much matter an object contains; measured in grams and kilograms.

T3

measure(verb)

To find out the size, length, mass, or capacity of something using a standard unit.

Shared by 2 concepts

T3

metre(noun)

A unit of length equal to 100 centimetres. Written as m.

T3

millilitres(noun)

A small unit for measuring liquid capacity; 1,000 ml = 1 litre. Written as ml.

T3

minute(noun)

A unit of time; there are 60 minutes in one hour.

T3

months(noun)

The twelve named divisions of the year: January through December.

T3

more than(phrase)

A greater amount; having a larger value.

T3

morning(noun)

The part of the day from when you wake up until noon.

T3

next(adjective)

Coming immediately after in order or position.

T3

note(noun)

A piece of paper money, such as a £5, £10, or £20 note.

T3

o'clock(noun)

A time shown when the minute hand points to 12 and the hour hand points to a number.

T3

pence(noun)

The plural of penny; the smaller unit of British money (100 pence = £1).

T3

penny(noun)

The smallest British coin, worth 1p.

T3

pound(noun)

The main unit of British money, worth 100 pence. Written as £.

T3

pour(verb)

To transfer liquid from one container to another.

T3

ruler(noun)

A straight measuring tool marked in centimetres and millimetres.

T3

scales(noun)

An instrument used for measuring mass or weight.

T3

second(noun)

A very short unit of time; 60 seconds make 1 minute.

T3

short(adjective)

Having a small length or height.

T3

shorter(adjective)

Not as long or tall as something else.

T3

shortest(adjective)

Having the least length or height among a group.

T3

tall(adjective)

Having a great height.

T3

taller(adjective)

Having greater height than something else.

T3

tallest(adjective)

Having the greatest height among a group.

T3

time(noun)

A measure of when events happen, read from a clock in hours and minutes.

T3

today(noun)

The present day; this day.

T3

tomorrow(noun)

The day after today.

T3

value(noun)

How much something is worth, either as a number or as money.

T3

volume(noun)

The amount of space a 3-D object takes up, or the amount of liquid in a container.

T3

weight(noun)

How heavy something is; in primary maths, used interchangeably with mass.

T3

worth(noun)

The value of something, especially coins and notes.

T3

yesterday(noun)

The day before today.

Concepts (5)

Comparing and measuring length and height

skill AI Facilitated

MA-Y1-C016

Measurement of length and height begins with direct comparison (this stick is longer than that stick) and progresses to using non-standard and then standard units. Pupils learn the specific vocabulary for comparing length and height and begin to use a ruler to measure. Mastery at Year 1 means pupils can use comparative language correctly, select an appropriate unit and tool, and record measurements.

Teaching guidance

Start with direct comparison — place objects side by side from the same baseline to compare length, stand pupils back-to-back to compare height. Establish the importance of consistent baseline and alignment. Move to measuring with non-standard units (e.g. handspans, cubes, paperclips) before introducing rulers. When introducing rulers, connect to number lines and counting. The non-statutory guidance confirms pupils move from non-standard to standard units. Key language includes: long/short, longer/shorter, longest/shortest, tall/short, taller/shorter, tallest/shortest, double/half (connecting to fractions).

Vocabulary (18 terms)
centimetre T3 new — A unit of length; there are 100 centimetres in one metre. Written as cm.
compare T3 new — To look at two or more numbers or objects to find which is bigger, smaller, longer, shorter, etc.
double T3 — Twice as many; the result of adding a number to itself.
half T3 — One of two equal parts of a whole.
height T3 new — How tall something is, measured from bottom to top.
length T3 new — How long something is from one end to the other.
long T3 new — Having a great length from one end to the other.
longer T3 new — Having greater length than something else.
longest T3 new — Having the greatest length among a group.
measure T3 new — To find out the size, length, mass, or capacity of something using a standard unit.
metre T3 new — A unit of length equal to 100 centimetres. Written as m.
ruler T3 new — A straight measuring tool marked in centimetres and millimetres.
short T3 new — Having a small length or height.
shorter T3 new — Not as long or tall as something else.
shortest T3 new — Having the least length or height among a group.
tall T3 new — Having a great height.
taller T3 new — Having greater height than something else.
tallest T3 new — Having the greatest height among a group.
Common misconceptions

Pupils commonly compare lengths without aligning from the same baseline (especially when one object is placed further forward), giving incorrect comparisons. They may confuse height (vertical) and length (horizontal) as distinct concepts. When using non-standard units, pupils often leave gaps or overlap units, getting inaccurate measurements.

Difficulty levels

Entry

Comparing two objects by direct comparison, placing them side by side from the same baseline.

Example task

Put these two pencils next to each other, both starting at the same edge of the table. Which is longer?

Model response: The red pencil is longer than the blue pencil.

Developing

Measuring length using non-standard units, ensuring no gaps or overlaps between units.

Example task

Measure the length of this book using cubes. How many cubes long is it?

Model response: The book is 8 cubes long.

Expected

Measuring length in centimetres using a ruler, starting from 0 and reading the scale correctly.

Example task

Measure the length of this ribbon using a ruler. How many centimetres long is it?

Model response: The ribbon is 14 centimetres long.

CPA Stages

concrete

Children compare objects by direct comparison, placing them side by side from a common baseline. They measure lengths using non-standard units (cubes, paperclips) placed end-to-end with no gaps or overlaps. They describe their findings using comparative language: longer, shorter, taller.

Transition: Child aligns objects from a common baseline for comparison, measures using non-standard units with no gaps or overlaps, and uses 'longer', 'shorter', 'taller' correctly.

pictorial

Children draw objects alongside rulers in diagrams, record measurements in simple tables, and label pictures with comparative language. They begin to use centimetre rulers, connecting the ruler to a number line.

Transition: Child draws objects aligned with a ruler starting at 0, reads the correct measurement in centimetres, and records measurements in a table using the abbreviation 'cm'.

abstract

Children estimate and measure lengths using centimetres and metres, selecting the appropriate unit and recording with standard abbreviations. They solve comparison problems using mathematical language without physical measuring tools.

Transition: Child estimates lengths to within 5 cm for objects under 30 cm, measures accurately with a ruler starting from 0, and records using 'cm' without confusion.

Delivery rationale

Primary maths (Y1) with concrete stage requiring physical manipulatives (Interlocking cubes for non-standard measuring, Paperclips). AI delivers instruction; facilitator sets up materials.

Comparing and measuring mass and weight

skill AI Facilitated

MA-Y1-C017

Mass/weight measurement begins with direct comparison using a balance scale and progresses to using non-standard and standard units. Pupils learn vocabulary for comparing mass and begin to use weighing scales. The curriculum notes that mass and weight are used interchangeably at this stage. Mastery means pupils can compare masses using a balance, describe the result using appropriate language, and begin to measure using non-standard and standard units.

Teaching guidance

Use a balance scale as the primary concrete tool — the visual metaphor of one side going down because it is heavier is powerful. Allow pupils to hold objects and feel their weight before using the balance. Introduce non-standard units (e.g. cubes, conkers) before standard units (grams, kilograms). Connect to number when recording measurements. The key vocabulary includes: heavy, light, heavier, lighter, heaviest, lightest, balance, mass, weight, grams, kilograms.

Vocabulary (13 terms)
balance T3 — A device for comparing the mass of objects, or the state when both sides are equal.
grams T3 new — A unit for measuring how heavy something is. Written as g.
heavier T3 new — Having more mass than something else when compared.
heaviest T3 new — Having the greatest mass among a group of objects.
heavy T3 new — Having a lot of mass; difficult to lift.
kilograms T3 new — A unit for measuring mass; 1 kilogram = 1,000 grams. Written as kg.
light T3 new — Having little mass; easy to lift.
lighter T3 new — Having less mass than something else.
lightest T3 new — Having the least mass among a group.
mass T3 new — How much matter an object contains; measured in grams and kilograms.
measure T3 — To find out the size, length, mass, or capacity of something using a standard unit.
scales T3 new — An instrument used for measuring mass or weight.
weight T3 new — How heavy something is; in primary maths, used interchangeably with mass.
Common misconceptions

Pupils often confuse size with mass (a larger object must be heavier), not understanding that density affects mass. They may predict incorrectly which of two objects is heavier based on appearance. Pupils sometimes misread a balance scale, thinking the side that goes up is the heavier one (it is actually lighter).

Difficulty levels

Entry

Comparing two objects by holding one in each hand and saying which feels heavier or lighter.

Example task

Hold the apple in one hand and the pencil in the other. Which is heavier?

Model response: The apple is heavier than the pencil.

Developing

Using a balance scale to compare two objects, identifying which is heavier by which side goes down.

Example task

Put the toy car on one side of the balance and the rubber on the other. Which is heavier? How do you know?

Model response: The toy car is heavier because its side of the balance goes down.

Expected

Measuring mass using non-standard units on a balance scale and beginning to use standard units (g, kg).

Example task

How many cubes does the pencil case balance? Is it heavier or lighter than 20 cubes?

Model response: The pencil case balances 15 cubes. It is lighter than 20 cubes.

CPA Stages

concrete

Children heft objects in each hand to feel which is heavier, then use a balance scale to confirm. Objects of different sizes but similar masses (a large sponge vs a small stone) challenge the misconception that bigger means heavier.

Transition: Child predicts and checks mass using a balance scale, correctly interpreting which side goes down as heavier, and recognises that size does not always determine mass.

pictorial

Children draw diagrams of balance scales showing which side is heavier or lighter, and record results in simple comparison tables. They draw pictures of objects ordered by mass.

Transition: Child draws balance scale diagrams correctly (heavier side lower) and records mass comparisons in tables using 'heavier' and 'lighter', ordering objects correctly.

abstract

Children use comparative vocabulary (heavier, lighter, heaviest, lightest) in spoken and written statements. They begin to use standard units (grams and kilograms) and record masses using abbreviations.

Transition: Child uses 'heavier', 'lighter', 'heaviest', 'lightest' correctly in descriptions, and begins to estimate and record masses in grams using the 'g' abbreviation.

Delivery rationale

Primary maths (Y1) with concrete stage requiring physical manipulatives (Balance scales, Classroom objects of varied size and mass). AI delivers instruction; facilitator sets up materials.

Comparing and measuring capacity and volume

skill AI Facilitated

MA-Y1-C018

Capacity is the maximum amount a container can hold; volume is the amount of space a substance occupies. In Year 1, these terms are used interchangeably as the curriculum specifies. Pupils compare containers by filling and pouring, and use language such as full, empty, half full, more than and less than. Mastery means pupils can compare the capacity of containers using appropriate language and begin to use standard units such as millilitres and litres.

Teaching guidance

Use water or sand play as the primary concrete context — pupils pour from one container to another, compare levels and build intuitive understanding. Use containers of different shapes but similar capacity to challenge intuitive assumptions (a tall thin container may hold more or less than a short wide one). Introduce standard measuring jugs with clear markings once non-standard comparison is secure. Connect to fraction language (half full, quarter full).

Vocabulary (13 terms)
capacity T3 new — How much a container can hold, measured in litres or millilitres.
container T3 new — An object that holds liquids or other materials, used when measuring capacity.
empty T3 new — Containing nothing; having no objects or liquid inside.
fill T3 new — To put liquid or objects into a container until it is full.
full T3 new — Containing as much as possible; no more can be added.
half full T3 new — A container filled to the middle point — containing half its capacity.
holds T3 new — Contains or can contain a certain amount.
less than T3 — Having a smaller value; shown by the < symbol.
litres T3 new — A unit for measuring how much liquid a container holds. Written as l.
millilitres T3 new — A small unit for measuring liquid capacity; 1,000 ml = 1 litre. Written as ml.
more than T3 — A greater amount; having a larger value.
pour T3 new — To transfer liquid from one container to another.
volume T3 new — The amount of space a 3-D object takes up, or the amount of liquid in a container.
Common misconceptions

Pupils almost universally believe that taller containers hold more — the conservation of liquid volume is a developmental milestone. They may pour liquid from a short wide container into a tall thin one and conclude the second container holds more because the level is higher. This is a normal stage of development; practical experience with many containers gradually builds correct understanding.

Difficulty levels

Entry

Comparing two containers using the vocabulary 'full', 'empty' and 'half full' by looking at the water level.

Example task

Look at these two bottles. Which one is full? Which one is half full? Which one is empty?

Model response: The red bottle is full. The blue bottle is half full. The green bottle is empty.

Developing

Comparing the capacity of two containers by pouring water from one to the other.

Example task

Pour the water from the tall thin bottle into the short wide bottle. Does it all fit? Which holds more?

Model response: The water does not all fit — some is left over. The tall thin bottle holds more than the short wide bottle.

Expected

Measuring capacity using non-standard units (cups) and beginning to use standard units (litres).

Example task

How many cups of water does the jug hold? Is it more or less than 5 cups?

Model response: The jug holds 7 cups of water. That is more than 5 cups.

CPA Stages

concrete

Children pour water or sand between different containers, comparing capacity by filling and emptying. They use vocabulary 'full', 'empty', 'half full', 'more than', 'less than'. Containers of different shapes but similar capacity challenge the misconception that taller means more.

Transition: Child compares capacity by pouring and uses 'holds more', 'holds less', 'full', 'empty', 'half full' correctly, recognising that a taller container does not always hold more.

pictorial

Children draw containers at different fill levels and label them (full, empty, half full, quarter full). They record the number of cups needed to fill different containers in simple tables and compare the numbers.

Transition: Child labels container diagrams with correct fill-level vocabulary and records capacity measurements in cups, comparing quantities using 'more than' and 'less than'.

abstract

Children use capacity vocabulary accurately in descriptions and begin to use the terms 'litres' and 'millilitres' as standard units. They solve simple comparison problems without physical containers.

Transition: Child uses 'litres' and 'millilitres' as measurement terms, compares capacities using subtraction, and solves simple capacity comparison problems without physical pouring.

Delivery rationale

Primary maths (Y1) with concrete stage requiring physical manipulatives (Water tray or sand tray, Containers of different shapes and sizes). AI delivers instruction; facilitator sets up materials.

Time: sequencing events and reading clocks to the hour and half past

skill AI Facilitated

MA-Y1-C019

Time in Year 1 covers two related areas: the language of time and sequence (ordering events using vocabulary like before, after, yesterday, tomorrow) and reading an analogue clock to the hour and half past the hour. Mastery means pupils can reliably sequence events using everyday time vocabulary, read analogue clock times to the hour and half past, and correctly draw clock hands to show given times.

Teaching guidance

Use the daily classroom timetable as a concrete, meaningful context for sequencing events in time. Use real analogue clocks, large class clocks and individual clock-face manipulatives (geared so the minute and hour hand move together). Establish the hour hand first — 'the short hand points to the hour.' Then introduce the half past position of the minute hand (pointing straight down). Connect the minute hand moving a half turn to the language of 'half past'. Connect quarter and three-quarter turns (from geometry) to quarter-past and quarter-to (not statutory until Year 2, but the turning language is introduced in Year 1).

Vocabulary (19 terms)
after T3 — Coming next or later in a sequence of numbers or events.
afternoon T3 new — The part of the day from noon (12:00) to evening.
before T3 — Coming just in front of a number or earlier in time.
clock T3 new — A device that shows the time, either with hands (analogue) or digits (digital).
days of the week T3 new — The seven named days that make up a week: Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday, Friday, Saturday, Sunday.
evening T3 new — The time of day from late afternoon until bedtime.
first T3 new — Coming before all others in order; the position at the start.
half past T3 new — A time 30 minutes after the hour, when the minute hand points to 6.
hour T3 new — A unit of time equal to 60 minutes.
minute T3 new — A unit of time; there are 60 minutes in one hour.
months T3 new — The twelve named divisions of the year: January through December.
morning T3 new — The part of the day from when you wake up until noon.
next T3 — Coming immediately after in order or position.
o'clock T3 new — A time shown when the minute hand points to 12 and the hour hand points to a number.
second T3 new — A very short unit of time; 60 seconds make 1 minute.
time T3 new — A measure of when events happen, read from a clock in hours and minutes.
today T3 new — The present day; this day.
tomorrow T3 new — The day after today.
yesterday T3 new — The day before today.
Common misconceptions

Pupils often confuse the hour and minute hands, particularly when both are similar in size. They may read 6 o'clock as 12:30 (reading the minute hand position as the hour). Half past causes confusion because the hour hand is between two numbers — pupils read the number it has passed (e.g. half past 3, but the hour hand is between 3 and 4 so they say 4 o'clock). When drawing clock hands, pupils often draw both hands the same length.

Difficulty levels

Entry

Sequencing daily events using time vocabulary: before, after, morning, afternoon.

Example task

Put these picture cards in order: eating breakfast, going to bed, eating lunch. Which comes first?

Model response: Eating breakfast, then eating lunch, then going to bed. Breakfast comes first because it happens in the morning.

Developing

Reading o'clock times on an analogue clock by identifying the position of the short (hour) hand.

Example task

What time does this clock show? [Clock shows 3 o'clock]

Model response: 3 o'clock. The short hand points to 3 and the long hand points to 12.

Expected

Reading o'clock and half past times on an analogue clock and drawing hands to show given times.

Example task

What time does this clock show? [Clock shows half past 7] Draw the hands for half past 4.

Model response: Half past 7. The short hand is between 7 and 8, and the long hand points to 6. [Draws hour hand between 4 and 5, minute hand at 6]

CPA Stages

concrete

Children order picture cards of daily events (breakfast, school, lunch, play, dinner, bedtime) using time vocabulary. They use real geared demonstration clocks and individual clock-face manipulatives to set and read o'clock times. The physical gearing shows how the minute hand movement drives the hour hand.

Transition: Child sequences daily events in the correct order using 'before', 'after', 'first', 'next', and sets a clock manipulative to any o'clock time by placing the short hand on the correct number and the long hand on 12.

pictorial

Children read o'clock and half past times from drawn clock faces and draw hands on blank clock faces to show given times. Pictures of daily routines are labelled with clock times. Time vocabulary worksheets reinforce sequencing language.

Transition: Child reads drawn clock faces showing o'clock and half past times correctly, and draws both hands in approximately the right positions for given times (hour hand between numbers for half past).

abstract

Children tell the time to the hour and half past using everyday language, without a physical or drawn clock in front of them. They use time vocabulary (morning, afternoon, evening, yesterday, today, tomorrow, days of the week, months) fluently in spoken descriptions.

Transition: Child describes events using 'o'clock' and 'half past' times unprompted, sequences days of the week correctly, and uses 'morning', 'afternoon', 'evening', 'yesterday', 'tomorrow' in context.

Delivery rationale

Primary maths (Y1) with concrete stage requiring physical manipulatives (Daily routine picture cards, Geared demonstration clock). AI delivers instruction; facilitator sets up materials.

Recognising coins and notes

knowledge AI Facilitated

MA-Y1-C020

Pupils must recognise all UK coins (1p, 2p, 5p, 10p, 20p, 50p, £1, £2) and notes (£5, £10, £20, £50) and know their values. This is a practical life skill embedded in the mathematical domain of measurement. Mastery means pupils can name any coin or note, state its value and use this knowledge in simple practical contexts such as 'finding' a given value using known coins.

Teaching guidance

Use real coins whenever possible — the feel, weight and visual appearance of real money is important. Practise sorting coins by denomination and ordering them by value. Connect coin recognition to number: the value printed on each coin or note is the amount it is worth. Play shopkeeper games where pupils pay using coins. Highlight that the same value can be made in different ways (two 5p coins equal one 10p coin), laying foundations for Year 2 money work.

Vocabulary (18 terms)
10p T3 new — A coin worth ten pence; ten of these make one pound.
1p T3 new — A coin worth one penny; the smallest value coin in British currency.
20p T3 new — A coin worth twenty pence.
2p T3 new — A coin worth two pence.
50p T3 new — A coin worth fifty pence; two of these make one pound.
5p T3 new — A coin worth five pence.
coin T3 new — A small round piece of metal used as money.
denomination T3 new — The face value of a coin or note (e.g. 1p, 2p, 5p, 10p, 20p, 50p, £1, £2).
note T3 new — A piece of paper money, such as a £5, £10, or £20 note.
pence T3 new — The plural of penny; the smaller unit of British money (100 pence = £1).
penny T3 new — The smallest British coin, worth 1p.
pound T3 new — The main unit of British money, worth 100 pence. Written as £.
value T3 new — How much something is worth, either as a number or as money.
worth T3 new — The value of something, especially coins and notes.
£1 T3 new — A coin worth one pound sterling; equal to 100 pence.
£10 T3 new — A banknote worth ten pounds sterling.
£2 T3 new — A coin worth two pounds sterling.
£5 T3 new — A banknote worth five pounds sterling.
Common misconceptions

Pupils often think larger coins are worth more (confusing physical size with value — a 5p coin is larger than a 2p but worth more; a 1p coin is similar in size to other coins but worth least). They may not recognise that the same amount can be made in different ways. Some pupils confuse the pound symbol (£) with other letters.

Difficulty levels

Entry

Sorting real coins by denomination and naming the most common coins (1p, 2p, 5p, 10p).

Example task

Sort these coins into piles. What is each pile?

Model response: This pile is 1p coins. This pile is 2p coins. This pile is 5p coins. This pile is 10p coins.

Developing

Naming all coins (1p, 2p, 5p, 10p, 20p, 50p, £1, £2) and all notes (£5, £10, £20) and stating their values.

Example task

Name this coin and tell me how much it is worth. [Shows 50p, then £2]

Model response: That is a 50 pence coin. It is worth 50p. That is a 2 pound coin. It is worth £2.

Expected

Finding given totals using different combinations of coins.

Example task

Make 20p using exactly 3 coins.

Model response: 10p + 5p + 5p = 20p.

CPA Stages

concrete

Children sort real UK coins by denomination, handling them to learn the size, colour, shape and weight differences between coins. Coin-rubbing activities create a permanent record. They name each coin and state its value.

Transition: Child sorts real coins into correct denomination piles, names each coin and states its value, including distinguishing between similar coins (1p and 2p, £1 and £2).

pictorial

Children match pictures of coins to their values on worksheets and illustrated price lists. They circle the correct coins needed to make a given amount and draw coins to show a total.

Transition: Child identifies all UK coins from pictures and matches them to their values, selecting correct coin pictures to make small amounts up to 20p.

abstract

Children name any coin or note and state its value without seeing it. They find simple totals by adding known coin values mentally and recognise that the same amount can be made with different coins.

Transition: Child states the value of any UK coin or note from its name alone, calculates simple coin totals mentally, and suggests different coin combinations for the same amount.

Delivery rationale

Primary maths (Y1) with concrete stage requiring physical manipulatives (Real UK coins (1p, 2p, 5p, 10p, 20p, 50p, £1, £2), Paper and crayons for coin rubbing). AI delivers instruction; facilitator sets up materials.