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Fractions as Operators

Maths • Year 5 • 25 • 24 students • Created with AI following Aligned with National Curriculum for England

Maths
5Year 5
25
24 students
9 February 2025

Teaching Instructions

i applied for harrow international school in hong kong for their class teacher maternity cover from march to jun, back in jan, they've replied to me saying they want me to come and interview, the day consists of two interviews, a lesson observation, a written test, and a school tour. obviously the standard of harrow is really good and i need to deliver an outstanding lesson on fractions as operators as you can see attached, unfortunately maths is not my forte and im really bad at it its a 25 minute lesson and i need to show all my skills. I was thinking of having minimal teacher talk time so that kids can take charge of their own learning but I would have to teach them the concept first too. I want a lesson which will be outstanding and really engaging as well as creative and collaborative. Give me some overall advise on what you think and a lesson plan that I could conduct. i need a success criteria in their too as well as a cpa approach. i was thinking to give a post it note to each table so that once they have the code down they can write it and stick it on the whiteboard at the front and compare their answers with the other team? im not sure about this what do you think? how will students check their answer? and what happens when a team finish early and the rest of the teams are still working? they also need something to focus on. So incorporate accordingly, make me an outstanding lesson plan and tell me how to prepare the slideshow as well, i want to make the slideshow interactive and cool. i was thinking of incorporating escape room theme, but if you have a better option let me know

Fractions as Operators

Lesson Details

  • Year Group: Year 5
  • Subject: Mathematics (Fractions – Fractions as Operators)
  • Curriculum Reference: UK National Curriculum – Year 5:
    • Objective: Solve problems involving multiplication and division, including using fractions as operators.
    • Concrete-Pictorial-Abstract (CPA) Approach): Use concrete materials, visual models, and abstract representations to deepen understanding.
  • Time: 25 minutes
  • Class Size: 24 students
  • Theme: Escape Room Challenge

Lesson Objectives (What Pupils Will Learn)

  1. Understand the meaning of fractions as operators (e.g., ⅓ of 12 = 4).
  2. Use concrete resources, pictorial representations, and abstract methods to solve fraction-based problems.
  3. Work collaboratively to decode number puzzles involving fractions.

Success Criteria (What Success Looks Like)

  • Gold: I can confidently apply fraction operators to solve a range of problems and explain my reasoning.
  • Silver: I can use concrete materials and pictorial representations to work out fraction calculations.
  • Bronze: I can recognise that finding a fraction of a number is like dividing it into equal parts.

Lesson Structure

1. Hook (3 mins) – The Escape Room Challenge

  • The classroom is set up as a "Secret Code Escape Room."
  • A mystery envelope (placed on each table) contains a problem that must be solved to unlock the next clue.
  • Explain the mission: "You are trapped in a mathematician’s study! The only way to escape is by cracking the fraction-coded lock. Are you up for the challenge?"

2. Teaching/ Modelling (5 mins) – CPA Approach

  1. Concrete (Hands-on Manipulatives)

    • Use counters/cubes to model finding a fraction of a set (e.g., ⅖ of 10 = ?).
    • Demo: Split 10 counters into 5 equal groups and count 2 groups to show ⅖.
  2. Pictorial Representation (Visualisation Strategy)

    • Draw bar models to visually represent fractions of numbers.
    • Show a bar split into parts and demonstrate how many parts we need to shade.
  3. Abstract (Symbolic Understanding)

    • Introduce the formal method: Divide by denominator, then multiply by numerator (e.g., ⅗ of 15 → 15 ÷ 5 × 3 = 9).

3. Group Challenge (12 mins) – Escape Room Puzzle

  • 6 Teams (4 students per group), each with a different fraction problem to solve.
  • After solving, teams write their final answers on a post-it note and place it on the whiteboard leaderboard – this promotes discussion.
  • Once an answer is posted, students check answers using the model displayed.
  • Fast Finishers: Get a “Power-Up” question (a trickier fraction problem or a real-life context challenge).
  • Teacher circulates to prompt questioning and give instant feedback.

4. Final Challenge (3 mins) – Unlock The Door

  • The board now displays all the answers submitted.
  • The class verifies whether the escape code (sum of all answers) is correct.
  • If correct, the class has escaped successfully!
  • Reflect: What strategies worked best? Who was great at explaining methods?

Resources & Preparation

  • Slideshow (Interactive & Engaging)

    • Title Slide: "The Escape Room Challenge" (exciting visuals, locked doors graphic).
    • Timer displayed to create urgency.
    • Slide for Visual Models (bar models & counters).
    • Answer Reveal Slide with a coded message appearing letter by letter.
  • Hands-On Materials

    • Mini whiteboards, cubes, and fraction grids for CPA approach.
    • Post-it notes for answer submissions.
    • Envelopes with fraction puzzles for the challenge.

Teacher’s Notes & Key Considerations

  • Supports: Pair struggling students with confident ones for peer coaching.
  • Extensions: If a team finishes early, they attempt a problem with decimals (e.g., ⅗ of £4.50).
  • Collaborative Element: Encouraging all students to contribute (roles within teams: "Explainer," "Checker," "Writer," etc.).
  • Assessment & Feedback: Immediate, based on reasoning and method used rather than just the correct answer.

Overall Teaching Reflection & Advice

This lesson balances minimal teacher talk with active student engagement. The Escape Room format adds an element of suspense and motivation. The CPA approach ensures conceptual understanding, while team collaboration provides a dynamic learning environment.

Final Takeaways:

  1. Pace is Key – Keep transitions smooth and exciting.
  2. Encourage Reasoning – Get students to justify their answers.
  3. Use Visuals Effectively – A strong slideshow will clarify tricky concepts.

This lesson plan delivers an outstanding, interactive, and collaborative learning experience tailored to impress Harrow International School! 🚀

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