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Alphabet Blocks

Age 5 to 11
Challenge Level Yellow star
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Alphabet Blocks


A group of children painted letters of the alphabet on some cube bricks. They did it in a special way. They painted A on one brick, B on two bricks, C on three bricks, and so on.

cube bricks


How many bricks had they painted by the time they had done the Cs?

How many bricks had they painted by the time they had done the Ds?

How many bricks had they painted by the time they had done the Es? And the Fs?

And the Gs?

And the Hs?

And the Is?

And the Js?

...

...?

Can you see why these totals are called triangle numbers?
 

Why do this problem?

This problem is an interesting way of practising addition and can be used to introduce children to the triangle numbers. It can also provide a context in which children can make mathematical predictions and justifications.

Possible approach

You could begin by using, for example, multilink cubes to represent the blocks. Show the children a red one and say that you could write an "A" on it. Then take two blue ones to write "B" on, then three yellows for "C". Ask the children how many blocks you have used altogether. How many would you have with the "D"s as well? How do they know? You could encourage them to talk to a partner and use a mini-whiteboard or paper to jot down ideas. You can then set them off to work on the rest of the task.

You could use a plenary to talk about the different ways the children have worked on the problem - for example sharing different ways of recording. You might want to make a list of the totals on the board (1, 3, 6, 10, 15 etc) and ask the class whether they can see why these are triangle numbers. You could refer to square numbers to get them thinking, or draw patterns on the board.

Key questions

What is the next letter of the alphabet?
How many bricks are needed for it?
How many bricks will that be altogether?
 

Possible extension

You could ask some children to predict how many blocks will have been used once, for example, the letter N has been used. How do they know? How about for the whole alphabet? Do they have any quick ways of working this out?
 

Possible support

Using cubes to represent the blocks will help all children get started on this problem. When it comes to finding out why they are called triangle numbers, you could suggest that learners use squared paper and put the letters in the squares, for example:

Start like this:
diagram


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Exploring Wild & Wonderful Number Patterns

EWWNP means Exploring Wild and Wonderful Number Patterns Created by Yourself! Investigate what happens if we create number patterns using some simple rules.

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The NRICH Project aims to enrich the mathematical experiences of all learners. To support this aim, members of the NRICH team work in a wide range of capacities, including providing professional development for teachers wishing to embed rich mathematical tasks into everyday classroom practice.

NRICH is part of the family of activities in the Millennium Mathematics Project.

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