Unit E – Changing Times

This maths scheme of work for Key Stage Two gets the children to practise converting between different units of time for hours, minutes and seconds and change analogue and digital times using the twelve hour clock and calendar dates. The class can use timetables to find the duration of events and journeys.

Practise converting between different units of time for hours, minutes and seconds and change a range of analogue and digital times using the twelve hour clock and calendar dates

Lesson One : Holiday Dates

Identify and record the matching calendar dates for different family holidays throughout the year using a range of time intervals between months and days

Lesson Two : Hours and Minutes

Identify and record the duration of a selection of events and experiences to match a range of different times that have been recorded in both hours and minutes

Lesson Three : Minutes and Seconds

Practise converting different times of sporting events and games between durations that have been recorded in both minutes and seconds

Lesson Four : Train Times

Identify and record the times of different train departures using timings that have been recorded on both analogue and digital clocks in twelve hours

Lesson Five : Bus Times

Select and calculate the duration between pairs of times to record different journeys by bus between a range of stops shown on a timetable

  • Stone Age

    Stone Age

    Investigate and record how different aspects of life in prehistoric Britain developed and changed during the Stone Age

  • Stonehenge

    Stonehenge

    Investigate and record some of the special reasons as to why people built different monuments during the Stone Age in prehistoric Britain from a range of materials

  • Stone Age Farming

    Stone Age Farming

    Explore and record how and why people in the Stone Age began to harvest crops and started farming animals in their settlements to support their growing communities

  • Stone Age Tools

    Stone Age Tools

    Identify, describe and illustrate how people in the Stone Age in prehistoric Britain produced and used different tools for a range of functions to support their communities