Why do this problem?
This problem is an appealing way for children to recognise,
interpret, describe and extend number sequences.Developing their
own patterns, as in the later part of the activity, provides an
opportunity for them to justify their own thinking, and evaluate
others' patterns.
Possible approach
The children should be
familiar with dominoes through free-play and domino games before
attempting more formal tasks such as pattern building.
It would be good to
gather the group on the carpet using large floor dominoes for this
activity, or alternatively use virtual dominoes on the interactive
whiteboard which you can drag around the screen (you might find our
Dominoes Environment useful). Begin with single patterns as in
the first example in the problem, keeping one end of the dominoes
constant (as in all sixes, all blanks, all ones etc.). You may want
to deliberately get the sequence wrong to challenge pupils to
correct your mistake. Encourage them to explain why it is wrong and
also why their correction is right.
Having two patterns
running at the same time is quite a challenge for the very young,
but you could pair them up and give a set of dominoes to each pair,
asking them to find those which complete the sequence. Having a
partner will enable them to talk about what they are doing, and
will force them to justify their thinking to each other.
Another way to challenge
the children is to locate the missing elements within the sequence,
rather than just at the end. This could form the basis of a plenary
activity.
Key questions
Let's look at the top of
the dominoes first. Can you say the numbers outloud?
What comes next?
Can you say the numbers
at the bottom of the domino?
What comes next?
Possible extension
Encourage children to
build and explain their own patterns. You may just be surprised by
the complexity of their thinking! The examples given in the problem
are clearly designed for quite young children who have basic
counting skills, but more complex patterns can be devised to
challenge more advanced children. For example, include addition or
subtraction, odds and evens, patterns that build row-by-row, or
grid patterns like this one:
Possible support
Many children will
benefit from saying the numbers in the sequence out loud to
reinforce the familiar counting patterns.
Handouts for teachers are
available here (
word document,
pdf
document), with the problem on one side and the notes on the
other.