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What 2D shape am I?
Can you work out what all these 2D shapes are? Read the clue and draw the shape!
Year 1 money maths: coin combinations
How good are you at counting money? Can you combine these coins and fill the purse?
Patterns playbook
Before children are able to start writing letters and words their hands and muscles need to get used to producing marks on paper. Our Patterns playbook offers your child the opportunity to
practise common writing patterns in preparation for handwriting letters at age 4 or 5. It's also a fun way to encourage an older child who has trouble writing particular letters. Can they make some waves, draw some curly baby hair and decorate a birthday cake with Smarties, all while doing some vital handwriting practice?
practise common writing patterns in preparation for handwriting letters at age 4 or 5. It's also a fun way to encourage an older child who has trouble writing particular letters. Can they make some waves, draw some curly baby hair and decorate a birthday cake with Smarties, all while doing some vital handwriting practice?
Halloween crossword
Demons and ghouls and black cats, oh my! Prepare for the pumpkin season with our Halloween crossword and increase your child's supernatural vocabulary.
Ordering numbers on a 100 square
A number square practice activity created by a primary school teacher to help children order numbers up to 100 correctly.
A number thief has stolen some of the numbers on this 100 square! How fast can your child write in the missing digits in the correct order?
A number thief has stolen some of the numbers on this 100 square! How fast can your child write in the missing digits in the correct order?
2D or 3D shape?
Cut out these shape names. Can you organise them into two piles, one for 2D and one for 3D? Look around the room. Can you find an object to match each shape card? Stick the card to the object with Blu Tack!
Adding 10 to a number
This is a calculation machine! It’s set to programme Add 10 today. Every number that goes in gets 10 added to it. Choose some numbers to go into the machine, then use the 100 square to add 10 to each one. Remember: you don’t need to count along 10 to add 10 to your number, just drop down one row on the 100 square.
Addition story problems: adding three numbers
Can you read through these story problems and do the calculations?
Calculations: different ways of working out
Can you draw pictures to help solve these tricky word problems?
Comparing lengths in cm
Here are some rather funny aliens. Can you measure them from head to toes (if they have any!) using a ruler? Under each alien write their length in centimetres.