Mathematics
Mathematics National Curriculum for Year 5.
Number - number and place value
The children will be taught to:
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read, write, order and compare numbers to at least 1 000 000 and determine the value of each digit
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count forwards or backwards in steps of powers of 10 for any given number up to 1 000 000
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interpret negative numbers in context, count forwards and backwards with positive and negative whole numbers, including through zero
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round any number up to 1 000 000 to the nearest 10, 100, 1000, 10 000 and 100 000
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solve number problems and practical problems that involve all of the above
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read Roman numerals to 1000 (M) and recognise years written in Roman numerals.
Number - addition and subtraction
The children will be taught to:
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add and subtract whole numbers with more than 4 digits, including using formal written methods (columnar addition and subtraction)
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add and subtract numbers mentally with increasingly large numbers
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use rounding to check answers to calculations and determine, in the context of a problem, levels of accuracy
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solve addition and subtraction multi-step problems in contexts, deciding which operations and methods to use and why.
Number - multiplication and division
The children will be taught to:
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identify multiples and factors, including finding all factor pairs of a number, and common factors of two numbers
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know and use the vocabulary of prime numbers, prime factors and composite (non-prime) numbers
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establish whether a number up to 100 is prime and recall prime numbers up to 19
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multiply numbers up to 4 digits by a one- or two-digit number using a formal written method, including long multiplication for two-digit numbers
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multiply and divide numbers mentally drawing upon known facts
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divide numbers up to 4 digits by a one-digit number using the formal written method of short division and interpret remainders appropriately for the context
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multiply and divide whole numbers and those involving decimals by 10, 100 and 1000
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recognise and use square numbers and cube numbers, and the notation for sqaured and cubed
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solve problems involving multiplication and division including using their knowledge of factors and multiples, squares and cubes
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solve problems involving addition, subtraction, multiplication and division and a combination of these, including understanding the meaning of the equals sign
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solve problems involving multiplication and division, including scaling by simple fractions and problems involving simple rates.
Number - fractions (including decimals and percentages)
The children will be taught to:
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compare and order fractions whose denominators are all multiples of the same number
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identify, name and write equivalent fractions of a given fraction, represented visually, including tenths and hundredths
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recognise mixed numbers and improper fractions and convert from one form to the other and write mathematical statements > 1 as a mixed number
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add and subtract fractions with the same denominator and denominators that are multiples of the same number
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multiply proper fractions and mixed numbers by whole numbers, supported by materials and diagrams
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read and write decimal numbers as fractions
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recognise and use thousandths and relate them to tenths, hundredths and decimal equivalents
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round decimals with two decimal places to the nearest whole number and to one decimal place
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read, write, order and compare numbers with up to three decimal places
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solve problems involving number up to three decimal places
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recognise the per cent symbol (%) and understand that per cent relates to ‘number of parts per hundred’, and write percentages as a fraction with denominator 100, and as a decimal
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solve problems which require knowing percentage and decimal equivalents of 1/2, 1/4, 1/5, 2/5, 4/5 and those fractions with a denominator of a multiple of 10 or 25.
Measurement
The children will be taught to:
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convert between different units of metric measure (for example, kilometre and metre; centimetre and metre; centimetre and millimetre; gram and kilogram; litre and millilitre)
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understand and use approximate equivalences between metric units and common imperial units such as inches, pounds and pints
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measure and calculate the perimeter of composite rectilinear shapes in centimetres and metres
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calculate and compare the area of rectangles (including squares), and including using standard units, square centimetres (cm2) and square metres (m2) and estimate the area of irregular shapes
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estimate volume [for example, using 1 cm3 blocks to build cuboids (including cubes)] and capacity [for example, using water]
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solve problems involving converting between units of time
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use all four operations to solve problems involving measure [for example, length, mass, volume, money] using decimal notation, including scaling.
Geometry - properties of shapes
The children will be taught to:
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identify 3-D shapes, including cubes and other cuboids, from 2-D representations
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know angles are measured in degrees: estimate and compare acute, obtuse and reflex angles
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draw given angles, and measure them in degrees (o)
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identify:
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angles at a point and one whole turn (total 360o)
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angles at a point on a straight line and 1/2 a turn (total 180o)
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other multiples of 90o
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use the properties of rectangles to deduce related facts and find missing lengths and angles
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distinguish between regular and irregular polygons based on reasoning about equal sides and angles.
Geometry - position and direction
The children will be taught to:
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identify, describe and represent the position of a shape following a reflection or translation, using the appropriate language, and know that the shape has not changed.
Statistics
The children will be taught to:
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solve comparison, sum and difference problems using information presented in a line graph
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complete, read and interpret information in tables, including timetables.