10 Coins

Content Name

10 Coins

Content Type

Partner Content

Description

10 Coins is a mathematical story about a lady who lost one of her 10 precious coins, before finding it again and celebrating with her friends.

Curricula

  • Country

    England

    Key Stage:

    EYFS, Key Stage 1

    Years:

    Reception, Year 1

    Subjects:

    • Mathematics

    Topics:

    • ELG: Number
    • Number - number and place value

    Programmes of Study:

    • Automatically recall (without reference to rhymes, counting or other aids) number bonds up to 5 (including subtraction facts) and some number bonds to 10, including double facts
    • given a number, identify 1 more and 1 less
    • Have a deep understanding of number to 10, including the composition of each number
    • Subitise (recognise quantities without counting) up to 5
  • Country

    Northern Ireland

    Key Stage:

    Foundation Stage

    Years:

    P1, P2

    Subjects:

    • Mathematics and Numeracy

    Topics:

    • Counting and Number Recognition
    • Understanding Money

    Programmes of Study:

    • Count forwards and backwards in steps of one within 5/10, from different starting points.
    • Count in the form and context of number rhymes, jingles and stories.
    • Explore numbers relevant to their everyday lives.
  • Country

    Scotland

    Level:

    Early

    Years:

    Age 3-4, P1

    Subjects:

    • Numeracy and Maths

    Topics:

    • Number, Money and Measure

    Programmes of Study:

    • I have explored numbers, understanding that they represent quantities and I can use them to count, create sequences and describe order.
  • Country

    Wales

    Step:

    PS 1

    Years:

    Reception, Nursery

    Subjects:

    • Mathematics and Numeracy

    Topics:

    • The number system is used to represent and compare relationships between numbers and quantities.

    Programmes of Study:

    • I can notice, recognise and write numbers in a range of media, through a multisensory approach, from 0 to 10 and beyond.
    • I can use my experience of the counting sequence of numbers and of one-to-one correspondence to count sets reliably. I can count objects that I can touch, and ones that I cannot.
    • I have experienced the counting sequence of numbers in different ways, reciting forwards and backwards, and starting at different points.

Custom Tags

Representation
EY55
coins
assembly
story
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