C Curriculum Explorer
Mathematics·Mathematical Thinking·meta

Multi-Step Problem Solving

With teacher support, make sense of multi-step problems involving larger numbers or mixed operations by breaking them into parts, choosing strategies, and checking answers for reasonableness — children at this stage are developing the habit with guidance; independent strategy evaluation comes later

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

  • Break a two-step word problem within 1000 into sub-problems and solve each part
  • Estimate an answer before calculating to set a reasonableness benchmark
  • Check an answer using a different method or inverse operation and revise if needed

Assessment prompt

If Multi-Step Problem Solving gets an answer that seems way too big or too small for a maths problem, do they notice and go back to check, even without you pointing it out?

Standards alignment

No external standards are linked to this topic.