C Curriculum Explorer
Mathematics·Mathematical Thinking·meta

Shape patterns (age 7+)

Look for and use mathematical structure: apply place-value patterns to three-digit operations, use multiplication/division relationships, and exploit shape properties to classify

Suggested ages 7–8

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Learning journey

Your child is learning to think like a mathematician — solving multi-step problems, explaining their reasoning, recognising patterns in numbers, and choosing the best tools and strategies for different mathematical challenges.

Evidence of understanding

  • Use the structure of place value to explain why adding hundreds only changes the hundreds digit
  • Use commutativity and the relationship between multiplication and division to derive unknown facts
  • Classify shapes by their structural properties (number of sides, right angles, parallel lines)

Assessment prompt

When Shape patterns (age 7+) is multiplying or working with larger numbers, do they use what they know about place value or number relationships to simplify the calculation — like breaking 24 × 3 into 20 × 3 + 4 × 3?

Standards alignment

No external standards are linked to this topic.