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Year 5 Objectives: Place Value Addition and Subtraction

This document outlines the key objectives for mathematics for Year 5 students. It covers several domains of mathematics including place value, addition and subtraction, multiplication and division, fractions, geometry, position and direction, measurement, and statistics. For each domain, it lists the key skills and concepts students should understand such as adding and subtracting multi-digit numbers, identifying factors and multiples, comparing and ordering fractions, measuring angles, converting between units of measure, and interpreting information in tables and graphs.

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100% found this document useful (1 vote)
78 views

Year 5 Objectives: Place Value Addition and Subtraction

This document outlines the key objectives for mathematics for Year 5 students. It covers several domains of mathematics including place value, addition and subtraction, multiplication and division, fractions, geometry, position and direction, measurement, and statistics. For each domain, it lists the key skills and concepts students should understand such as adding and subtracting multi-digit numbers, identifying factors and multiples, comparing and ordering fractions, measuring angles, converting between units of measure, and interpreting information in tables and graphs.

Uploaded by

App Bounty
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Year 5 Objectives

Place Value Addition and Subtraction


 read, write, order and compare numbers to at least 1 000 000  add and subtract whole numbers with more than 4 digits,
and determine the value of each digit including using formal written methods (columnar addition and
 count forwards or backwards in steps of powers of 10 for any subtraction)
given number up to 1 000 000  add and subtract numbers mentally with increasingly large
 interpret negative numbers in context, count forwards and numbers
backwards with positive and negative whole numbers, including  use rounding to check answers to calculations and determine,
through zero in the context of a problem, levels of accuracy
 round any number up to 1 000 000 to the nearest 10, 100,  solve addition and subtraction multi-step problems in
1000, 10 000 and 100 000 contexts, deciding which operations and methods to use and
 solve number problems and practical problems that involve all why.
of the above
 read Roman numerals to 1000 (M) and recognise years written
in Roman numerals
Multiplication and Division Fractions
 identify multiples and factors, including finding all factor  compare and order fractions whose denominators are all
pairs of a number, and common factors of two numbers multiples of the same number
 know and use the vocabulary of prime numbers, prime factors  identify, name and write equivalent fractions of a given
and composite (non-prime) numbers fraction, represented visually, including tenths and
 establish whether a number up to 100 is prime and recall hundredths
prime numbers up to 19  recognise mixed numbers and improper fractions and convert
 multiply numbers up to 4 digits by a one- or two-digit number from one form to the other and write mathematical
using a formal written method, including long multiplication for 2 4 6
statements > 1 as a mixed number [for example, + = =
two-digit numbers 5 5 5
 multiply and divide numbers mentally drawing upon known 1
1 ]
facts 5
 divide numbers up to 4 digits by a one-digit number using the  add and subtract fractions with the same denominator and
formal written method of short division and interpret denominators that are multiples of the same number
remainders appropriately for the context  multiply proper fractions and mixed numbers by whole
numbers, supported by materials and diagrams
 read and write decimal numbers as fractions [for example,
71
0.71 = ]
100
 recognise and use thousandths and relate them to tenths,
hundredths and decimal equivalents
 round decimals with two decimal places to the nearest whole
number and to one decimal place
 read, write, order and compare numbers with up to three
decimal places
 solve problems involving number up to three decimal places
 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
 solve problems which require knowing percentage and decimal
1 1 1 2 4
equivalents of , , , , and those fractions with a
2 4 5 5 5
denominator of a multiple of 10 or 25.
Geometry – Properties Geometry – Position and direction
 identify 3-D shapes, including cubes and other cuboids, from  identify, describe and represent the position of a shape
2-D representations following a reflection or translation, using the appropriate
 know angles are measured in degrees: estimate and compare language, and know that the shape has not changed.
acute, obtuse and reflex angles  Pupils recognise and use reflection and translation in a variety
 draw given angles, and measure them in degrees (o) of diagrams, including continuing to use a 2-D grid and
 identify: coordinates in the first quadrant. Reflection should be in lines
 angles at a point and one whole turn (total 360o) that are parallel to the axes.
1
 angles at a point on a straight line and a turn (total
2
o
180 )
 other multiples of 90o
 use the properties of rectangles to deduce related facts and
find missing lengths and angles
 distinguish between regular and irregular polygons based on
reasoning about equal sides and angles.
Measure Statistics
 convert between different units of metric measure (for  solve comparison, sum and difference problems using
example, kilometre and metre; centimetre and metre; information presented in a line graph
centimetre and millimetre; gram and kilogram; litre and  complete, read and interpret information in tables, including
millilitre) timetables.
 understand and use approximate equivalences between metric
units and common imperial units such as inches, pounds and
pints
 measure and calculate the perimeter of composite rectilinear
shapes in centimetres and metres
 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
 estimate volume [for example, using 1 cm3 blocks to build
cuboids (including cubes)] and capacity [for example, using
water]
 solve problems involving converting between units of time
 use all four operations to solve problems involving measure
[for example, length, mass, volume, money] using decimal
notation, including scaling.

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