Back to Year 5 notes
Detailed Notes Year 5

Mathematics classroom notes

Year 5 - Line and rotational symmetry

Strand / topic: Measurement and Geometry / Line and rotational symmetry

Based on Pi Leo Academy's Victorian Curriculum F-10 Mathematics year-level guide and aligned to NAPLAN-style mathematical reasoning. Official curriculum code: Not stated in the provided curriculum source.

Learning goal

By the end of this note, students should be able to explain line and rotational symmetry, use a clear method, solve simple and test-style questions, and check their answers for Year 5 Measurement and Geometry work.

Why it matters

It builds number sense, reasoning and confidence for classwork, quizzes and problem solving. This is a NAPLAN year, so students should practise reading the question carefully, choosing the correct operation or formula, showing working and checking whether the answer is reasonable.

Big Idea

What properties does the shape have?

Shapes are named by their sides, corners, faces and angles.

A square has 4 equal sides and 4 right angles.

For Year 5, focus on understanding the idea before rushing to the final answer.

Think about it

Think about it: tiles, boxes, road signs and buildings are made from shapes.

Skill checklist

What you need to know for this topic

Use this as a study checklist before trying quizzes, worksheets or NAPLAN-style questions.

2D figures

  • recognise and name common 2D shapes
  • identify polygons and non-polygons
  • count sides and vertices
  • compare sides and angles

3D objects

  • recognise prisms, pyramids and curved objects
  • count faces, edges and vertices
  • identify flat and curved surfaces
  • match simple nets to objects

Properties

  • parallel sides
  • perpendicular sides
  • equal sides
  • right angles
  • lines of symmetry
Shape guide

Shape reference list

Use this list when a question asks you to compare, classify or describe shapes by their properties.

sides vertices angles parallel sides perpendicular sides equal sides faces edges curved surfaces lines of symmetry

2D shapes to know

Reference drawing of triangles.
triangles

classify by side length and angle size

Reference drawing of quadrilaterals.
quadrilaterals

square, rectangle, rhombus, parallelogram, trapezium and kite

Reference drawing of regular polygons.
regular polygons

equal sides and equal angles

Reference drawing of composite shapes.
composite shapes

made by joining simpler shapes

Reference drawing of symmetrical shapes.
symmetrical shapes

matching parts across one or more lines

3D objects to know

Reference drawing of prisms.
prisms

same cross-section along the length

Reference drawing of pyramids.
pyramids

one base and triangular faces meeting at a vertex

Reference drawing of nets.
nets

flat layouts that fold into 3D objects

Reference drawing of composite solids.
composite solids

made from simpler 3D objects

1 What this means

Shape maths is about noticing sides, corners, faces, angles and symmetry.

Shape questions are solved by properties such as sides, angles, faces and symmetry. In Year 5, students should first ask, 'What is the question really asking me to find?' Then they can draw a picture, make a table, use a number line, write a formula or build an equation. The final answer should match the story, the units and the size of the numbers.

  • Name shapes by their properties, not just by how they look.
  • Check sides, angles, parallel lines, faces, vertices and symmetry.
  • A shape can belong to more than one family.
  • Use correct vocabulary when explaining your answer.

2 Important rules / ideas

Properties

Use sides, angles, faces, edges, vertices and symmetry to classify shapes.

Special cases

A square is also a rectangle because it has four right angles.

3D words

Faces are flat surfaces, edges are where faces meet and vertices are corners.

Important vocabulary

property

A feature of a shape or object.

parallel

Lines that stay the same distance apart.

symmetry

When one part matches another after a fold, turn or reflection.

face

A flat surface on a 3D object.

3 Step-by-step method

  1. List the shape's features.
  2. Compare sides, angles, faces or symmetry.
  3. Use the correct mathematical name.
  4. Explain using properties, not just appearance.
ReadDrawSolveCheck

4 Worked examples

Easy

Name a 2D shape with 3 sides.

  1. A shape with 3 sides is a triangle.
Medium

How many faces does a cube have?

  1. A cube has 6 square faces.
Harder

Explain why a square is also a rectangle.

  1. A rectangle has 4 right angles.
  2. A square has 4 right angles.
  3. So a square is a special rectangle.
Word problem

A tile pattern uses shapes with 6 sides. What are the shapes called?

  1. A 6-sided polygon is a hexagon.
  2. The tiles are hexagons.

5 More examples

Properties

Why is a cube a prism?

It has the same square cross-section all the way through.

Symmetry

A rectangle has how many lines of symmetry?

A non-square rectangle has 2 lines of symmetry.

NAPLAN-style thinking

In NAPLAN-style questions, line and rotational symmetry may appear as a short calculation, a word problem, a diagram, a table or a multi-step reasoning question. Students should slow down and decide what the question is really asking before calculating.

Multiple choice

Estimate first and eliminate answers that are too small, too large or use the wrong unit.

Short answer

Write only the answer required, but use working on paper to avoid mental slips.

Word problem

Circle the numbers, underline the action words and decide whether all numbers are needed.

Multi-step

Do one step at a time and label intermediate answers so the final step is clear.

6 Common mistakes

Rushing the question

Read the final sentence before calculating.

Wrong operation or formula

Name the topic and method before starting.

No reasonableness check

Estimate or use inverse operations to check.

Common NAPLAN-style traps
  • Choosing the first operation seen in the wording.
  • Forgetting units, labels or place value.
  • Stopping after the first step when the question asks for a final comparison.

7 Tips to remember

Properties first

Classify by features, not by colour, size or rotation.

Use labels

Side, vertex, edge and face mean different things.

Check symmetry

Fold lines must create matching parts.

Parent teaching tips

  • Ask your child to explain the method aloud before writing the answer.
  • Use a real-life context at home, such as shopping, cooking, sport scores, maps or timetables.
  • Praise clear working and checking, not only speed.
  • Encourage a quick diagram or table for word problems before calculating.

Remember

For line and rotational symmetry, identify the question type, choose a clear method, show working and check the answer.

8 Quick practice

  1. Name a 2D shape with 3 sides.
  2. How many faces does a cube have?
  3. Explain why a square is also a rectangle.
  4. A tile pattern uses shapes with 6 sides. What are the shapes called?

9 Answers / explanation

Question 1

Answer: A shape with 3 sides is a triangle.

A shape with 3 sides is a triangle.

Question 2

Answer: A cube has 6 square faces.

A cube has 6 square faces.

Question 3

Answer: So a square is a special rectangle.

A rectangle has 4 right angles. A square has 4 right angles. So a square is a special rectangle.

Question 4

Answer: The tiles are hexagons.

A 6-sided polygon is a hexagon. The tiles are hexagons.

Extension challenge

Create your own multi-step question for this topic using an Australian context, then solve it and explain each step.

Hint: Use shopping, sport, maps, timetables, weather, school events or measurement at home.

Answer guide

Answers will vary. A strong answer includes clear working, correct units and a final sentence.

Quick revision

  • Know what line and rotational symmetry is asking you to find.
  • Choose a diagram, table, formula, number line or equation before calculating.
  • Show enough working that you can find and fix mistakes.
  • Check the final answer, units and reasonableness.

Pi Leo Academy is an independent educational resource and is not affiliated with or endorsed by VCAA, ACARA, NAPLAN, the Victorian Department of Education, ACER or any selective school.

Next step

Ready to build steady progress before the next NAPLAN check-in?

Book a free trial lesson, see how the platform works, and get a clear learning plan for your child.

Start 30-day free trial