This page outlines the scope and sequence for Grades 3–4. Individual Brickit lessons will be provided separately.
🧭 Teaching Philosophy
“Engaging Math with Spare LEGO® Bricks” for Grades 3–4 bridges the transition from concrete exploration to abstract reasoning. Students use LEGO® models to represent, test, and explain mathematical ideas — turning hands-on activity into visible thinking.
Concrete → Pictorial → Abstract
LEGO® connects ideas to tangible models, supporting the CPA progression.
Collaborative Reasoning
Students verbalize strategies, justify solutions, and learn from peers.
Creative Math
Every model becomes a proof, not just an answer.
Growth Mindset
Experimentation and mistakes are integral to the learning process.
Teacher tip: Begin each topic with a short hands-on task before moving to representation and symbols.
📚 Course Overview
🎯 Curriculum Units
Multiplication & Arrays
Students represent multiplication using visual models, exploring patterns and the commutative property.
- Equal Groups and Repeated Addition
- Building Arrays (2×–10×)
- Skip Counting Towers
- Commutative Property
- Multiplication Stories
- LEGO® Array Challenge
Teacher Comment: Connect arrays to the future concept of area (Unit 6).
Differentiation: Level A — up to 5×5; Level B — larger arrays and decomposition strategies.
Division & Sharing
Students divide models evenly and explore relationships between multiplication and division.
- Sharing Equally
- Division as Repeated Subtraction
- Fact Families
- Remainders in Real Life
- LEGO® Bakery Challenge
Teacher Comment: Use realistic sharing contexts (people, tables, plates) to introduce remainders.
Differentiation: Level A — division without remainders; Level B — interpreting remainders in word problems.
Fractions & Decimals
Students connect equal parts to real models, exploring fraction equivalence and visual decimal representations.
- Equivalent Fractions
- Comparing Fractions
- Mixed Numbers with LEGO®
- Decimals as Fractions of a Whole
- Tenths and Hundredths
- Fair Share Café Challenge
Teacher Comment: Teach fractions through visible LEGO® plates before introducing decimal notation.
Differentiation: Level A — halves, thirds, quarters; Level B — 2/3 vs 3/5, linking to 0.3 = 3/10.
Place Value & Large Numbers
Students model 3- and 4-digit numbers, showing structure through stacks of 10, 100, and 1000.
- Base-10 Builds (Ones, Tens, Hundreds)
- Building Thousands
- Expanded Form Models
- Rounding Towers
- Comparing Large Numbers
Teacher Comment: Build “towers of tens” before symbolic work.
Differentiation: Level A — up to 1,000; Level B — up to 10,000, rounding to tens, hundreds, thousands.
Data, Graphs & Logical Thinking
Students collect data from their builds and organize it visually to identify patterns.
- Sorting and Counting LEGO® Types
- Building Bar Graphs
- Reading and Interpreting Data
- Logic Puzzle Challenge
Teacher Comment: Introduce this unit after place value to connect numerical reasoning and data display.
Differentiation: Level A — simple bar charts; Level B — comparing sets, median/mode extension.
Area & Perimeter
Students measure builds in studs, discover area as repeated addition, and calculate L×W.
- Measuring in Studs
- Perimeter Models
- Building Area (Length × Width)
- Comparing Areas
- Design Your LEGO® Park Challenge
Teacher Comment: Reinforce connection between arrays and the area formula.
Differentiation: Level A — small rectangles; Level B — composite shapes and perimeter puzzles.
Geometry: Shapes, Angles & Symmetry
Students identify, build, and describe shapes using correct mathematical language.
- Building 2D Shapes
- Types of Angles
- Lines of Symmetry
- Rotational Patterns
- The LEGO® Architecture Challenge
Teacher Comment: Emphasize geometry vocabulary (vertex, edge, ray, line, right/acute/obtuse).
Differentiation: Level A — identifying properties; Level B — constructing with constraints and rotations.
🌍 Curriculum Alignment
Alignment to major international frameworks ensures portability across diverse educational contexts.
| Concept Area | Common Core (US) | Cambridge Primary | IB PYP Concept |
|---|---|---|---|
| Multiplication & Division | 3.OA.A–3.OA.D | N3.1–N3.5 | “Operations show repeated relationships” |
| Fractions & Decimals | 3.NF.A–4.NF.C | N4.1–N4.5 | “Parts and wholes describe proportion” |
| Place Value & Number Sense | 3.NBT.A–4.NBT.A | N3.2–N4.2 | “Number systems build structure” |
| Measurement & Area | 3.MD.A–3.MD.C | M3.1–M4.3 | “Measurement connects math to real world” |
| Geometry & Symmetry | 3.G.A–4.G.A | G3.1–G4.3 | “Shapes represent space and pattern” |
| Data & Reasoning | 3.MD.B–4.MD.B | H3.1–H4.2 | “Data helps us interpret the world” |
Note: Decimals serve as Grade 4 extension; fractions remain core for both grades.
🧠 Skills Progression Map
This map shows how mathematical skills develop progressively across the seven units.
| Skill Domain | Unit Focus | Observable Outcomes |
|---|---|---|
| Multiplication & Division | Units 1–2 | Builds and interprets arrays; connects to repeated addition |
| Fractions & Decimals | Unit 3 | Compares and models equivalence; links fractions to decimals |
| Place Value | Unit 4 | Builds and reads numbers ≤ 10,000; rounds accurately |
| Measurement & Area | Unit 6 | Measures in studs; calculates area/perimeter |
| Geometry | Unit 7 | Identifies angles and symmetry in 2D/3D models |
| Data Representation | Unit 5 | Collects, organizes, and interprets data |
| Reasoning & Communication | All Units | Explains strategies; uses precise math vocabulary |
| Collaboration & Reflection | All Units | Works in teams; gives constructive feedback |
Teacher tip: Revisit earlier models when introducing new ideas to strengthen conceptual connections.
🧰 Teacher Toolkit
Materials Checklist
- LEGO® bricks (400–600 per team)
- Brickit App for Schools
- Baseplates, rulers, grid paper
- Markers, sticky notes
- Tablets or cameras for photo portfolios
Group Setup
- 4–6 teams of 2–4 students
- Rotate roles weekly: Builder – Recorder – Presenter – Checker
- Arrange tables for easy scanning and collaboration
Assessment Tools
- Observation checklists (participation, accuracy, reasoning)
- Peer feedback cards (“2 stars + 1 wish”)
- Student journals and reflection prompts
- Photo portfolios of builds with student comments
Mini Rubric for Open Tasks (4‑Point)
- 4 – Model correct, reasoning clear, vocabulary precise
- 3 – Model correct, reasoning partial
- 2 – Idea present, model incomplete
- 1 – Needs teacher support
Differentiation Strategies
- Two levels (A/B) within each lesson
- Scaffolded builds and visual aids
- Extensions: limited resources, optimizing design, strategy comparison