Hero background

Time Telling Basics

Mathematics • 45 • 15 students • Created with AI following Aligned with the NCCA Primary Curriculum, Junior Cycle & Senior Cycle (Leaving Cert) specifications

Download now

Free PDF · we'll email you a copy

Mathematics
45
15 students
9 May 2026

Teaching Instructions

This is lesson 1 of 10 in the unit "Time Management Mastery". Lesson Title: Introduction to Time Telling Lesson Description: Introduce students to reading analog clocks, focusing on the hour and minute hands. Engage them with hands-on activities using physical clocks.

Overview

This 45-minute introductory lesson is designed for 5th and 6th Class students, following the Irish Primary School Curriculum framework (Mathematics: Number - Measurement: Time). The focus is on developing students’ competence and confidence in reading analog clocks, particularly recognising the hour and minute hands, as a foundational time-telling skill. Through interactive, hands-on activities, students will engage actively, promoting understanding and retention.


Curriculum Links

Strand: Number
Strand Unit: Measurement
Learning Outcome:

  • 5th & 6th Classes: Develop understanding and reading of time using analogue clocks and digital formats, including hour, half-hour, and quarter-hour increments (Curriculum, Mathematics – Time, Strand Unit).
  • Skills Developed: Students will be able to interpret and tell time on an analogue clock and understand the movement of hour and minute hands (Mathematics Curriculum, 2000).
  • Competencies: Mathematical Communication, Problem Solving, Reasoning.

Learning Objectives

By the end of the lesson students will:

  1. Identify the hour and minute hands on an analogue clock.
  2. Understand the roles of the hour and minute hands in telling time.
  3. Read the time to the nearest hour and five-minute intervals on an analogue clock.
  4. Demonstrate their knowledge through manipulation of physical clock models.
  5. Begin to use correct time-related vocabulary (e.g., o’clock, half-past).

Resources Needed

  • Set of 15 individual analog clock models (adjustable hands) – one per student
  • Large teaching clock with movable hands (demonstration clock)
  • Whiteboard and markers
  • Time vocabulary cards (e.g., o’clock, half-past, quarter-past, minute hand, hour hand)
  • Worksheets with clock faces showing various times (to be used for follow-up activities)

Lesson Structure

1. Introduction and Context Setting (5 minutes)

  • Greet students and briefly introduce the unit, “Time Management Mastery”.
  • Use a simple question to spark interest: “Can you think about times in your day when knowing the exact time is really important?”
  • Show the large teaching clock model and ask if students can identify the two hands. Label them clearly: Hour hand (short) and Minute hand (long).

2. Exploration and Demonstration (10 minutes)

  • Discuss roles of each hand: “The hour hand tells us the hour. The minute hand tells us how many minutes past the hour.”
  • Move the hands on the large clock to demonstrate several key times: 3 o’clock, 6 o’clock, 9 o’clock, and 12 o’clock. Emphasise where each hand points.
  • Introduce the vocabulary cards; explain “o’clock” means the minute hand is on 12, signifying the start of a new hour.

3. Hands-On Activity: Clock Handling (15 minutes)

  • Distribute individual analog clocks to students.
  • Call out different times (starting with o’clock times, e.g., “Set your clock to 2 o’clock”).
  • Students adjust their clocks accordingly, showing the hour and minute hands correctly.
  • Walk around, prompting students to verbalise their times and correct any mistakes.
  • Progress to asking students to set times with minute hand at 5-minute intervals (e.g., 4:15, 7:30). Use the vocabulary introduced.
  • Use paired work to encourage discussion: “Ask your partner to check your clock and say the time out loud.”

4. Consolidation and Discussion (10 minutes)

  • Bring students together to share what they found easy or challenging.
  • Show the large clock again and invite students individually to come up and set a time of your choice.
  • Reinforce the importance of knowing time in daily routines and managing time properly.
  • Introduce concept that next lessons will build on reading time more precisely and using digital clocks.

5. Assessment and Reflection (5 minutes)

  • Quick verbal quiz: Show a time on the large clock and ask individual students what time it is.
  • Use thumbs up/down for students to self-assess their confidence reading the clock.
  • Exit ticket: Each student says or writes one new thing they learned about telling time today.

Differentiation Strategies

  • Support: Pair struggling students with peers who grasp the concept for peer mentoring during activities. Provide extra guidance with clock hands.
  • Extension: Challenge advanced learners by asking them to set and read quarter-past and quarter-to times after grasping basic hour and five-minute increments. Encourage them to explain reasoning aloud.

Classroom Management and Tips

  • Ensure each student has a clear workspace to manipulate their clock models.
  • Use encouraging language and praise effort to build confidence in maths skills.
  • Keep instructions clear, concise, and repeat key vocabulary frequently.
  • Incorporate movement – invite students to stand up and adjust large demonstration clock to keep engagement high.

This lesson approach combines curriculum-aligned objectives with tactile learning and communication, fostering deep conceptual understanding and confidence in time telling — a crucial skill underpinning effective time management and daily organisation for 10-12 year olds.

Create Your Own AI Lesson Plan

Join thousands of teachers using Kuraplan AI to create personalized lesson plans that align with Aligned with the NCCA Primary Curriculum, Junior Cycle & Senior Cycle (Leaving Cert) specifications in minutes, not hours.

AI-powered lesson creation
Curriculum-aligned content
Ready in minutes

Created with Kuraplan AI

Generated using gpt-4.1-mini-2025-04-14

🌟 Trusted by 1000+ Schools

Join educators across Ireland