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Telling Time Fun

Mathematics • 45 • 26 students • Created with AI following Aligned with the NCCA Primary Curriculum, Junior Cycle & Senior Cycle (Leaving Cert) specifications

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Mathematics
45
26 students
4 May 2025

Teaching Instructions

This is lesson 2 of 6 in the unit "Summer Time Math Fun". Lesson Title: Lesson 2: Telling Time to the Hour and Half Hour Lesson Description: Students will learn to tell time to the hour and half-hour using analog clocks. They will practice by creating their own clock faces and participating in a time-telling relay race.

Telling Time Fun

Lesson Overview

Unit: Summer Time Math Fun
Lesson 2 of 6
Duration: 45 minutes
Class size: 26 students
Age Group: Third Class (approximately 8-9 years old)
Curriculum Framework: IE Curriculum Mathematics – Time Strand


Learning Objectives

By the end of the lesson, students will be able to:

  • Read and tell the time to the hour and half-hour on analog clocks. (Strand Unit: Time – Early 3rd class)
  • Demonstrate an understanding of the position of the hour and minute hands corresponding to “o’clock” and “half past” times.
  • Create their own analogue clock faces with movable hour and minute hands.
  • Apply time-telling skills in an active, cooperative setting.

Curriculum Reference

  • Strand: Measures
  • Strand Unit: Time
  • Learning Outcome:
    • Students should be enabled to tell the time to the nearest hour and half-hour using analogue clocks. (Curriculum framework pages 51-56)
    • Students develop practical skills and an understanding of the daily clock and its application in real-life context.
  • Key Competency: Managing Information and Thinking; Communicating

Materials Needed

  • Blank paper plates or thick card circles (one per student)
  • Split pin fasteners (one per student)
  • Pre-cut paper clock hands (hour and minute)
  • Whiteboard & markers
  • Timer or stopwatch
  • Prepared flashcards showing different times to the hour or half-hour
  • Sticky tack or magnets (for displaying clocks on wall)
  • Prizes or stickers for the relay race teams

Lesson Breakdown

1. Introduction (5 minutes)

  • Begin with a brief revision of what time is, focusing on the clock face.
  • Ask students, "What do the two hands on the clock represent?"
  • Using a large classroom analog clock visual, demonstrate the hour hand and minute hand, emphasising how the minute hand points to 12 for “o’clock” and to 6 for “half past”.
  • Show examples of times like 3:00, 7:00, 1:30, 5:30 on the classroom clock, linking them to real-life activities (e.g., lunchtime).

2. Guided Practice – Create Your Clock (15 minutes)

  • Distribute the paper plates or card circles, paper clock hands, and split pins.
  • Model how to assemble the analogue clock:
    • Write numbers 1-12 evenly spaced around plate.
    • Attach the two paper hands using the split pin.
  • Circulate and assist as students assemble their clocks.
  • Once ready, call out random “o’clock” and “half past” times.
  • Students move the hands on their clocks accordingly.
  • Use questioning to reinforce concepts:
    • "Where is the minute hand for ‘half past’?"
    • "If the hour hand is on 4 and the minute hand is on 12, what time is it?"

3. Interactive Activity – Time-Telling Relay Race (20 minutes)

  • Organise students into 5 teams with 5–6 children each.
  • Place flashcards with times (only o’clock and half past) at the start line.
  • One student per team runs to the flashcard, reads the time aloud, runs to the designated relay “clock station” wall, and sets that time on a large demo clock or magnetic clock display.
  • After setting the clock correctly, the student runs back to tag the next teammate.
  • Continue until all team members have participated.
  • At the end of each round, gather teams for a quick review and praise effort.
  • Award small stickers or points for accuracy and speed.

4. Wrap-up and Assessment (5 minutes)

  • Gather students on the carpet.
  • Oral quiz: Show times on a large classroom clock, ask individual students to say the time aloud.
  • Quick-fire round: Say the time verbally (“Half past 2"), student shows with their paper clock.
  • Reflect on the lesson:
    • Ask, “What did you find easy or tricky about telling time today?”
    • Reinforce key vocabulary: “hour hand”, “minute hand”, “o’clock”, “half past”.

Differentiation & Support

  • For Struggling Learners: Partner with a peer mentor for the relay race; use simplified language and more guided clock manipulation.
  • For Advanced Learners: Challenge with setting quarter past and quarter to times (while acknowledging this is beyond today’s objectives).
  • Provide visual time support cards during independent work.

Assessment & Evidence of Learning

  • Observation notes during clock-building and relay activity—accuracy of hand positioning.
  • Oral responses during quick-fire questioning.
  • Peer and self-assessment during activities (e.g., students check if clocks match times shown).
  • Informal feedback collected during wrap-up discussion.

Extension Ideas (Optional Homework or Extra Time)

  • Encourage students to notice clocks at home and report times to the class.
  • Simple drawing prompt: Draw a picture of what you do at "o’clock" or "half past" times.
  • Interactive online games (suggest teacher use IE appropriate resources) to reinforce clock skills.

Teacher Reflection (Post-Lesson)

  • Note student engagement levels during hands-on activities.
  • Were students able to consistently and accurately read times?
  • Adjust future lessons with more practice on half past if needed.
  • Consider more physical games if students responded well to the relay format.

This lesson creatively combines craft, movement, and collaborative play to enrich the understanding of time concepts following the IE Curriculum’s guidelines. It fosters kinesthetic, visual, and auditory learning styles while building essential measurement skills for third class students.

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