Lesson 7
Flat and Solid Shapes
Lesson Purpose
The purpose of this lesson is for students to identify shapes as flat (two-dimensional) or solid (three-dimensional) as they build and sort shapes.
Lesson Narrative
In previous lessons, students explored, identified, created, and counted two-dimensional shapes such as circles and squares. In this lesson, students are not expected to use precise vocabulary so they may use words like “lying flat” to describe a two-dimensional shape and words like “solid,” “taking up space,” “tall,” or “sticks up” to describe a three-dimensional shape. Throughout this unit, students will hear and use “flat” and “solid” to describe two-dimensional and three-dimensional shapes. The names of common three-dimensional shapes will be introduced in a future lesson.
- Action and Expression
- MLR8
Learning Goals
Teacher Facing
- Distinguish between flat and solid shapes.
Student Facing
- Let’s build shapes with clay.
Required Materials
Materials to Gather
Materials to Copy
- Flat Shapes Cards K
Required Preparation
Activity 1:
- Each student needs a piece of clay.
- Gather a cone and cylinder to display.
Activity 2:
- Each group of 2 needs a set of solid shapes and a set of cards.
Activity 3:
- Gather materials from:
- Counting Collections, Stage 1
- Match Mine, Stage 1
- Shake and Spill, Stages 1-4
Lesson Timeline
Warm-up | 10 min |
Activity 1 | 15 min |
Activity 2 | 10 min |
Activity 3 | 20 min |
Lesson Synthesis | 5 min |
Cool-down | 0 min |
Teacher Reflection Questions
The standards ask students to “identify shapes as two-dimensional (lying in a plane, ‘flat’) or three-dimensional (‘solid’).” How does building shapes out of clay help students distinguish between two-dimensional and three-dimensional shapes?