Overview
Duration: 50 minutes
Class size: 25 students
Age group: Year 4 (9-10 years)
Curriculum: Irish Primary Curriculum – Mathematics Strand: Measures and Money
Curriculum Alignment
Strand: Measures and Money
Strand unit: Money — Recognising, using, and understanding money in real-life contexts
Learning Objectives:
- MS.MN.4.1: Identify and use euro coins and notes, understanding their value.
- MS.MN.4.2: Solve simple problems involving the calculation of money, including making change.
- MS.MN.4.3: Recognise and interpret mathematical information in everyday money contexts.
Cross-Strand Links:
- Number: operations with numbers applied to money calculations.
- Geometry: recognising coins and notes, identifying shapes and sizes.
- Problem Solving: applying logical thinking in puzzles and practical contexts.
Key Competencies:
- Managing Information and Thinking
- Being Numerate
- Communicating
Learning Outcomes
By the end of the lesson, students will:
- Confidently identify euro coins and notes with ease.
- Apply addition and subtraction skills to solve money-related problems.
- Demonstrate understanding of making change through practical, interactive scenarios.
- Engage collaboratively and think critically through interactive games and puzzles.
Resources Needed
- Sets of real or replica euro coins and notes for each pair of students
- Printed “Coin Puzzle Cards” (puzzles involving combinations of coins to reach a target sum)
- Whiteboards and markers for mental calculation snapshots
- Interactive money shopping game setup (simple props like price tags, items)
- Worksheets with structured money problems linked to the curriculum
Lesson Breakdown
1. Introduction & Warm-up Game (10 minutes)
Activity: "Coin Quest Challenge" – a puzzle game
- Students work in pairs with sets of coins.
- Each pair receives a “Coin Puzzle Card” prompting them to create exact amounts using the fewest coins. Example task: “Make 75c using the fewest coins possible.”
- Challenge students to think flexibly about coin combinations.
- Share quick solutions together on the board to reinforce coin values and quick mental arithmetic.
Curriculum Link: MS.MN.4.1 — familiarising with coin values, mental calculation.
Competency: Managing Information; Being Numerate.
2. Interactive Exploration (15 minutes)
Activity: Role-Play: “The Classroom Corner Shop”
- Students stay in pairs; each pair runs a mini-shop selling items with labelled prices (using price tags in euros and cents).
- One student is cashier, the other shopper.
- The shopper chooses 2-3 items to “buy.” The cashier calculates total cost and determines change to give, using coins.
- Students can use actual coin sets to provide physical practice in making change.
- Swap roles halfway.
Curriculum Link: MS.MN.4.2 — problem-solving with money, making change.
Cross-Strand Link: Number — addition/subtraction practice in real context.
Competency: Being Numerate; Communicating.
3. Consolidation & Discussion (10 minutes)
Whole class reflection and whiteboard quiz:
- Teacher calls out scenarios (e.g., “If you buy a chocolate for €1.45 and pay with a €2 coin, how much change should you get?”)
- Students write answers on mini whiteboards, then show simultaneously.
- Discuss strategies for calculations (mental math, counting up change).
Curriculum Link: MS.MN.4.3 — interpreting and solving everyday money problems.
Competency: Managing Information; Being Numerate.
4. Cross-Strand Connection (5 minutes)
Geometry and Money:
- Quick activity identifying shapes on coins: Students discuss the edges, sizes, and any patterns found on euro coins (circle, metallic composition).
- Teacher links shapes/materials discussed to Geometry strand concepts (recognition of shape and size).
5. Independent Practice and Exit Ticket (10 minutes)
Task: Worksheet with mixed problems:
- Identifying coins from pictures.
- Calculating total amounts shopping list style.
- Finding correct change for given payments.
- One tricky “puzzle” question encouraging higher-order thinking (e.g., “What is the largest amount you can make with four coins?”).
Exit Ticket: Ask students to write down one new thing they learned today or one strategy that helped them in money calculations.
Teacher Notes / Tips
- Encourage students to verbalise their thinking to develop communication and reasoning skills.
- Use concrete resources (real coins) throughout for kinaesthetic engagement.
- Support struggling students with more physical coin handling and one-to-one guidance.
- Challenge advanced learners with coin puzzles that involve multiple steps or larger sums.
Summary
This lesson places interactive, hands-on money learning at the heart of the lesson, tied clearly to the Irish Primary Curriculum. By merging game-based introduction, role play, and problem solving, it helps students perceive money as a practical, manageable concept vital for daily life and numeracy development.
End of Plan