F-10 Curriculum (V8)
F-10 Curriculum (V9)
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This sequence of 6 tasks explores relationships between numbers 1 to 20 through subitising, comparison, and using 5 and 10 as benchmarks. Students organise collections and use subitisable patterns to help count the total in their collection. Students also compare their collection with a friend to see who has more and who ...
This game focuses on addition, subtraction and estimation. It can be played many times as the totals will often be different and the focus of the mathematics can change. There is a video included to help with how to play the game.
This engaging game encourages students to arrange the Cuisenaire rods to create a face that equals 100.
This quick game encourages students to use their fingers to model numbers in different ways.
In this game, students add single digit numbers and subitise domino dot patterns.
In this second of three lessons, students are provided with the opportunity to play with their leaf families, and consider the many possibilities. They represent their leaf stories using pictures, numerals and symbols.
In this first of three lessons, students investigate the concept of Yuendumu leaf games and stories and become familiar with how they can be used for addition, subtraction, quantification, counting and subitising.
In this final of these three lessons, students work in groups to reflect on and record their learning about representing number stories using Yuendumu leaf games and stories. They represent their leaf stories using pictures and numerals.
This two-week unit develops student knowledge, understanding and skills that problems can be solved and represented in different ways.
This sample unit provides further develops students' knowledge, understanding and skills of place value and number representation.
Collections of ten are really useful – this unit develops student knowledge, understanding, and place value skills, and how attributes can be used to sort objects.
Students use standard place-value partitioning to represent 'teen' numbers.
This comprehensive resource describes the progression of number-related ideas showing the relationship to other curriculum strands. The resource demonstrates examples of relevant teaching strategies, investigations, activity plans and connected concepts in number including teaching and cultural implications.
The focus of this activity is for students to count a variety of objects in their home environment and write the number for each.
The focus of this activity is to discover if students can represent numbers, without the need to count from 1. If students ‘trust the count’ from here they will be able to use strategies to combine collections. If students do not ‘trust the count’ they may be able to combine two collections by counting by ones, but this ...
This lessons explores the use of Cuisenaire rods and uses play to introduce them to students.
Students recognise amounts to five without counting.
The content of this book is organised into topics including understanding whole and decimal numbers, and understanding fractional numbers.
Students recall the twos number sequence and use skip counting by twos to count a collection.
This activity provides students with an opportunity to partition numbers in different ways. Partitioning is an important concept as it allows numbers to be broken up so that they’re easier to use.