
Maths • Year 3 • 45 • 18 students • Created with AI following Aligned with Australian Curriculum (F-10)
I want the plan to focus on division as repeated subtraction, drawing an array to help me share items equally or find the number of groups and identify what is being divided and how many groups or items in each group.
Year Level: Year 3
Subject: Mathematics
Duration: 45 minutes
Class Size: 18 students
Curriculum Area: Number and Algebra → Number and place value
Content Descriptor (ACMNA057):
“Represent and solve problems involving multiplication and division using efficient mental and written strategies and appropriate digital technologies.”
By the end of this lesson, students will be able to:
Students will demonstrate success by:
Objective: Activate prior knowledge about equal groups.
Prompts:
Strategy: Encourage open talk around terms like “groups”, “sharing”, “each”, “fair”, and “equal”.
Teacher notes observations on the board (no right or wrong answers yet).
**Step 1: Introduce division as repeated subtraction
Use the whiteboard to model:
Add a number line to show the jumps being subtracted each time.
Step 2: Link to Arrays
Present a real-life example:
Use a think-aloud:
Interactive questioning throughout for participation.
Grouping: Pairs
Materials: Dice, counters, A3 paper
Instructions:
Teacher circulates and prompts:
Extension: If students complete early, ask them to make up their own story problems for their equation.
Each student receives the worksheet with 3 real-world problems. All involve division, but phrased either as sharing or grouping.
Example Problem 1:
"You have 20 apples. You give 5 to each friend. How many friends get apples?"
(division by grouping)
They must:
Challenge Box:
“Can you write your own problem using 24 items?”
Draw the array and write the division sentence.
Volunteers (2–3 students) come up to:
Teacher prompts the rest of the class to give them “Wow” or “Wonder” feedback.
Wrap-Up Message:
“Today, we found that dividing isn’t just one thing – it can be about sharing equally or finding how many groups we can make. Arrays and subtraction helped us every step of the way!”
Formative assessment through:
Consider using today’s observations to set up tomorrow’s lesson on division with remainders, building on today’s hands-on learning with clear visual strategies.
This fun, practical, and rigorous session will help your Year 3 learners build a solid conceptual understanding of division—not just as a mathematical operation, but as a meaningful activity connected to their world.
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