1st Grade Math Vertical Planning
Mathematics builds systematically from concrete counting in kindergarten to abstract algebra and calculus in high school. Vertical planning in math means understanding exactly what number sense, operations, and reasoning skills students bring to each grade — and where those skills lead next.
- ✓Add and subtract within 20
- ✓Understand place value (tens/ones)
- ✓Measure lengths
- ✓Tell time to the hour/half-hour
Standards: 1.OA, 1.NBT, 1.MD
K–12 Math Skill Progression
Generate a Vertical Plan for 1st Grade Math
Use the AI to map skill progressions, identify gaps, and align curriculum across your grade band — customized for your standards and context.
Open Vertical Planning ToolKey Vertical Themes in Mathematics
Counting (K) → Place value (1–2) → Fractions (3–5) → Ratios and proportionality (6–7) → Functions and algebra (8–12)
Addition/subtraction within 20 (1) → Multi-digit operations (2–4) → Fraction operations (5) → Integer and rational number operations (6–7) → Algebraic manipulation (8–12)
Shapes and sorting (K–1) → Area and perimeter (3–4) → Volume and coordinate geometry (5–6) → Proof and transformations (9–10) → Trigonometry (10–12)
Graphing with pictures (K–2) → Bar graphs and line plots (3–4) → Dot plots and box plots (6) → Probability and inference (7–12)
Planning Considerations
- 1Identify the prerequisite skills students need before introducing new concepts — fraction understanding is essential before fraction operations.
- 2Track which grade levels introduce manipulatives and which phases them out — the transition matters for incoming students.
- 3Coordinate vocabulary across grades: 'regrouping' (elementary) vs. 'carrying' vs. formal place value language.
- 4Flag where CCSS expects fluency (automatic recall) vs. proficiency (accurate with strategies) — these are different targets.
- 5Identify common misconceptions at each grade level so teachers can anticipate student errors from prior-year instruction.
Cross-Curricular Connections
- ↔Science: Measurement, data collection, graphing experimental results, and scientific notation all require math fluency.
- ↔ELA: Word problems develop reading comprehension; mathematical writing builds precise language use.
- ↔Social Studies: Data literacy, percentages in economics, and map scale all draw on math skills.
Frequently Asked Questions
Why does vertical planning matter for math?
Math is the most vertically dependent subject — every new concept builds on prior ones. A gap in fraction understanding in 4th grade, for example, creates cascading problems through algebra.
How do I use this with my department?
Review the grade rows together to see where your grade fits in the progression. Look at the grade above yours to understand where students are headed, and the grade below to see what they should already know.
What do I do if my students are missing prior-grade skills?
Use the reteach tool to build targeted reteaching plans for prerequisite skills, then use the lesson plan generator to bridge into grade-level content.
How does vertical planning differ from horizontal planning?
Horizontal planning aligns content across teachers at the same grade level. Vertical planning aligns content across grade levels — making sure this year's learning prepares students for next year.