Y4

Maths

Spring 1 Week 2 Maths in Minutes

An image of the Spring 1 Week 2 Maths in Minutes Resource


This Year 4 Maths in Minutes resource is designed to promote quick recall and retrieval of children's knowledge and prior learning, recapping a number of objectives from Year 3 and the autumn term of Year 4.

There are three sets of five questions that cover a variety of maths skills in the areas of number, calculation, measure, geometry, statistics and fractions. This activity is perfect to use during registration, at the start of a maths lesson or whenever you have some time to spare. We've specially designed this resource to be displayed on the interactive whiteboard to save on printing costs. Try it today!


Curriculum Objectives

  • Compare volume/capacity (l/ml)
  • Tell and write the time from an analogue clock, including using Roman numerals from I to XII
  • Add and subtract amounts of money to give change, using both £ and p in practical contexts
  • Draw 2-D shapes
  • Make 3-D shapes using modelling materials; recognise 3-D shapes in different orientations and describe them
  • Identify right angles, recognise that two right angles make a half-turn, three make three quarters of a turn and four a complete turn; identify whether angles are greater than or less than a right angle
  • Interpret and present data using bar charts, pictograms and tables
  • Solve one-step and two-step questions [for example, ‘How many more?’ and ‘How many fewer?’] using information presented in scaled bar charts and pictograms and tables
  • Order and compare numbers beyond 1,000
  • Recognise the place value of each digit in a four-digit number (thousands, hundreds, tens, and ones)
  • Identify, represent and estimate numbers using different representations
  • Add and subtract numbers with up to 4 digits using the formal written methods of columnar addition and subtraction where appropriate
  • Estimate and use inverse operations to check answers to a calculation
  • Recall multiplication and division facts for multiplication tables up to 12 × 12
  • Recognise and show, using diagrams, families of common equivalent fractions