DepedLibre

COT Lesson Plan Grade 1 Patterns and Algebra

COT Lesson Plan Grade 1 Patterns and Algebra

COT Lesson Plan Grade 1 Patterns and Algebra (Introduction)

As a Grade 1 teacher preparing for your Class Observation Tool (COT) evaluation, you know that a well-crafted lesson plan can make the difference between a good and outstanding demonstration. The Patterns and Algebra strand under the MATATAG Curriculum presents unique opportunities to showcase your teaching excellence while helping your young learners build critical mathematical foundations.

This comprehensive guide will walk you through everything you need to create an exceptional COT lesson plan for Grade 1 Patterns and Algebra, aligned with the latest MATATAG Curriculum standards.

COT lesson plan Grade 1 Patterns and Algebra is an essential requirement for teachers preparing for Classroom Observation Tool (COT) evaluations under the Department of Education (DepEd). This article provides a comprehensive, observation-ready, and curriculum-aligned COT lesson plan Grade 1 Patterns and Algebra designed to help teachers demonstrate effective teaching strategies, learner-centered activities, and measurable outcomes.

Understanding Grade 1 Patterns and Algebra in the MATATAG Curriculum

What Makes Patterns and Algebra Essential in Grade 1?

Pattern recognition isn’t just about identifying what comes next in a sequenceβ€”it’s the foundation of algebraic thinking. Research shows that early exposure to patterns helps children develop:

  • Logical reasoning skills that transfer across all subjects
  • Problem-solving abilities essential for higher mathematics
  • Analytical thinking that supports critical decision-making
  • Early algebra readiness that prevents learning gaps in later grades

According to the MATATAG Mathematics Curriculum Guide, Grade 1 learners focus on repeating patterns using various attributes including shapes, colors, numbers, letters, and objects. This foundational skill sets the stage for understanding more complex mathematical relationships in higher grades.

Key Learning Competencies for Grade 1 Patterns (Quarter 3)

The MATATAG Curriculum identifies specific competencies for repeating patterns:

Learning Competency

Description

Quarter Coverage

Recognizing Repeating Patterns

Identify and describe patterns using shapes, objects, numbers, and letters

Quarter 3, Week 7

Determining Next Terms

Find what comes next or before in a repeating pattern

Quarter 3, Week 7-8

Completing Missing Terms

Fill in missing elements within a pattern sequence

Quarter 3, Week 8

Creating Original Patterns

Design new repeating patterns using various materials

Quarter 3, Week 8

These competencies build progressively, ensuring learners master identification before moving to creation and application.

Components of an Outstanding COT Lesson Plan for Patterns and Algebra

  1. Curriculum Content Standards and Performance Standards

Content Standards (What learners should know): The learners should have knowledge and understanding of repeating patterns using one or more attributes.

Performance Standards (What learners should be able to do): By the end of the quarter, learners are able to extend existing repeating patterns and create new repeating patterns using various materials and representations.

Learning Competencies:

  • Determine the next term/s in a repeating pattern (patterns could use rhythmic properties, visual elements in the arts, shapes, numbers, letters, etc.)
  • Complete missing term/s in a given repeating pattern
  • Create their own repeating patterns
  1. Crafting Meaningful Learning Objectives

Effective learning objectives follow the Knowledge-Skills-Attitudes-Values (KSAV) framework aligned with MATATAG principles:

Knowledge:

  • Students will identify the core unit that repeats in a pattern
  • Students will recognize patterns in different forms (visual, numerical, alphabetical)

Skills:

  • Students will accurately determine the next 2-3 terms in a repeating pattern
  • Students will complete missing elements in pattern sequences with 90% accuracy
  • Students will create original repeating patterns using at least 2 attributes

Attitudes:

  • Students will actively participate in group pattern-building activities
  • Students will demonstrate persistence when solving pattern challenges

Values:

  • Students will appreciate the presence of patterns in nature and daily life
  • Students will show respect for classmates’ creative pattern designs
  1. Essential Materials and Resources

To make your COT demonstration engaging and effective, prepare these materials:

Manipulatives:

  • Pattern blocks (triangles, squares, rectangles in various colors)
  • Counting bears or linking cubes
  • Colored beads and string
  • Shape cut-outs (laminated for durability)
  • Number cards (0-10)
  • Letter cards (A-Z)

Visual Aids:

  • Pattern strip charts
  • Flashcards with completed and incomplete patterns
  • Real-life pattern photos (tiles, fabrics, nature)
  • PowerPoint presentation or visual slides

Technology Integration:

  • Interactive pattern games (if available)
  • Document camera for real-time demonstration
  • Tablet or computer for digital pattern activities

Assessment Tools:

  • Pattern completion worksheets
  • Observation checklist
  • Exit tickets
  • Formative assessment rubrics

Step-by-Step COT Lesson Procedures: The 5E Model

ENGAGE (7-10 minutes)

Objective: Hook students’ interest and activate prior knowledge

Activity: “Pattern Detective Hunt”

Start your lesson with energy and excitement! Display 3-4 objects around the classroom that form a pattern (e.g., chair-table-chair-table arrangement, alternating colored book spines, classroom wall decorations).

Teacher Script:

“Good morning, my dear pattern detectives! Today, we have a special mission. I’ve hidden patterns all around our classroom. Can you spot them? Let’s go on a pattern hunt!”

Engagement Strategies:

  • Use a detective magnifying glass prop to make it playful
  • Play upbeat music during the “hunt” phase
  • Award “Detective Badges” (stickers) to students who find patterns
  • Ask: “What makes this a pattern? What’s happening here?”

Connection to Prior Knowledge: Review what students learned about shapes, colors, and counting sequences in previous quarters. This scaffolding helps them understand that patterns are arrangements that repeat.

EXPLORE (10-12 minutes)

Objective: Allow students to discover patterns through hands-on manipulation

Activity: “Build-A-Pattern Station”

Divide the class into 4-5 groups. Each group receives a container with mixed manipulatives (blocks, beads, or shapes).

Group Task Instructions:

  1. Choose 2-3 objects from your container
  2. Arrange them to create a repeating pattern
  3. Continue the pattern for at least 4 repetitions
  4. Be ready to explain your pattern to the class

Teacher’s Role:

  • Circulate among groups, asking guiding questions:
    • “What objects did you choose?”
    • “How many times does your pattern repeat?”
    • “Can you point to where one pattern unit ends and the next begins?”
  • Observe students’ natural approaches to pattern-making
  • Document interesting student strategies for later discussion

Differentiation:

  • For struggling learners: Provide a simple AB pattern card as a model
  • For advanced learners: Challenge them to create ABC or ABB patterns

EXPLAIN (8-10 minutes)

Objective: Formalize understanding through direct instruction

Activity: “Pattern Parts and Rules”

Gather students back to the main teaching area. Use their created patterns as examples.

Key Concepts to Teach:

  1. Pattern Unit (Core): The part that repeats
    • Display a pattern: β­πŸŒ™β­πŸŒ™β­πŸŒ™
    • Ask: “What part keeps happening again and again?” (β­πŸŒ™)
    • Label this as the “pattern core” or “pattern unit”
  2. Types of Repeating Patterns:

Pattern Type

Example

Description

AB Pattern

β¬›β¬œβ¬›β¬œβ¬›β¬œ

Two elements alternating

AAB Pattern

πŸ”΄πŸ”΄πŸ”΅πŸ”΄πŸ”΄πŸ”΅

One element appears twice, then another once

ABC Pattern

πŸ”Ίβ¬œβ­•πŸ”Ίβ¬œβ­•

Three different elements in sequence

ABB Pattern

β­πŸŒ™πŸŒ™β­πŸŒ™πŸŒ™

One element, then another twice

  1. Reading Patterns:
    • Patterns can be read left to right (like reading)
    • Some patterns can also go up and down or in circles
    • Each complete unit tells us what comes next

Visual Presentation: Use your board or slides to show multiple examples. Color-code the pattern units to help visual learners see the repetition clearly.

Checking for Understanding:

  • “Point to one complete pattern unit in this example”
  • “If I continue this pattern, what shape comes next?”
  • “Can you clap this pattern with me?” (Use rhythm patterns)

ELABORATE (10-12 minutes)

Objective: Apply learning to new situations and deepen understanding

Activity: “Pattern Fix-It Shop”

Present students with “broken” patterns that have missing elements. Their job is to “fix” them by determining what’s missing.

Example Patterns to Display:

  1. β­•β¬œβ­•__β­•β¬œ (Missing: ⬜)
  2. A B C A __ C (Missing: B)
  3. 1 2 1 2 __ 2 (Missing: 1)
  4. πŸ”ΊπŸ”Ίβ¬œπŸ”Ί__⬜ (Missing: πŸ”Ί)

Teaching Strategies:

Strategy 1: Think-Aloud Modeling

“Let me show you my thinking. I see circle, square, circle… then something is missing. Let me look at the beginning again. Circle, square, circle, square. The pattern unit is circle-square. So after circle, what should come? Square! Now what comes after square? Circle!”

Strategy 2: Partner Problem-Solving Pair students and give each pair a “broken pattern” card. Partners discuss and agree on the missing element before sharing with the class.

Strategy 3: Real-World Connection Show photos of real-life patterns with missing elements:

  • Tiled floors with missing tiles
  • Beaded bracelets with missing beads
  • Days of the week patterns (Monday-Tuesday-Wednesday-??)

Higher-Order Thinking Questions:

  • “Could this pattern work a different way? Why or why not?”
  • “How did you know what was missing?”
  • “What would happen if we changed just one element in the pattern?”

EVALUATE (8-10 minutes)

Objective: Assess student mastery of pattern recognition and creation

Multi-Tiered Assessment Approach:

Level 1: Pattern Recognition (Basic) Show 3 patterns on the board. Students identify which one is correctly continuing the pattern by raising colored cards (Green = Correct, Red = Incorrect).

Example:

Pattern A: β­πŸŒ™β­β­πŸŒ™ (Incorrect – should be β­πŸŒ™β­πŸŒ™β­)

Pattern B: πŸ”΄πŸ”΅πŸ”΄πŸ”΅πŸ”΄πŸ”΅ (Correct)

Pattern C: ABC ABC AB ABC (Incorrect)

Level 2: Pattern Completion (Intermediate) Distribute individual worksheets with 4-5 patterns. Students draw or write the next 2 terms and identify one missing term in each pattern.

Level 3: Pattern Creation (Advanced) Students create their own original repeating pattern using materials provided. They must:

  • Use at least 2 different attributes (shape AND color, or number AND letter)
  • Show at least 3 complete repetitions
  • Explain their pattern rule to a partner

Exit Ticket: Before leaving, each student completes a quick exit ticket:

  1. Draw the next shape: β¬œβ­•β¬œβ­•β¬œ___
  2. What’s missing? A B C A __ C
  3. Create your own simple AB pattern using letters or numbers

Documentation for COT:

  • Take photos of student work
  • Record student explanations (with permission)
  • Use observation checklist to note individual performance
  • Collect exit tickets as evidence of learning

Differentiated Instruction Strategies

For Diverse Learners in Your Classroom

For Students with Learning Difficulties:

  • Use concrete manipulatives exclusively before introducing abstract symbols
  • Limit pattern complexity to simple AB patterns initially
  • Provide pattern templates they can copy and extend
  • Use color-coding consistently
  • Pair with peer buddies for support

For English Language Learners:

  • Use visual aids prominently
  • Teach vocabulary with gestures: “repeat,” “next,” “before,” “pattern”
  • Allow responses through pointing or showing rather than verbal explanation
  • Provide bilingual pattern cards if possible

For Gifted and Advanced Learners:

  • Challenge them to create AABB or AABC patterns
  • Introduce growing patterns (1, 2, 3, 4… or small, medium, large…)
  • Ask them to find and photograph patterns at home
  • Have them teach their pattern to classmates

For Kinesthetic Learners:

  • Use movement patterns: clap, stomp, clap, stomp
  • Create human patterns with students standing in sequence
  • Use physical objects that can be manipulated
  • Incorporate dance or rhythm activities

Assessment Strategies Aligned with MATATAG Standards

Formative Assessment During the Lesson

Observation Checklist (Use during group work):

Indicator

Observed

Developing

Needs Support

Identifies the pattern unit correctly

βœ“

βœ“

βœ“

Extends pattern with 2-3 terms accurately

βœ“

βœ“

βœ“

Fills in missing terms correctly

βœ“

βœ“

βœ“

Creates original repeating pattern

βœ“

βœ“

βœ“

Explains pattern rule verbally

βœ“

βœ“

βœ“

Participates actively in activities

βœ“

βœ“

βœ“

Summative Assessment Options

Option 1: Pattern Portfolio Students compile 3-5 examples of patterns they’ve identified, completed, or created throughout the week. They explain each pattern using simple sentences or drawings.

Option 2: Performance Task Individual assessment where students:

  1. Complete 5 different pattern sequences
  2. Identify missing elements in 3 patterns
  3. Create one original pattern using classroom materials
  4. Explain their pattern to the teacher

Option 3: Written Test A short quiz with visual pattern items appropriate for Grade 1 level (see the FREE downloadable test at the end of this article).

Rubric for Pattern Creation Assessment

Criteria

Excellent (4)

Proficient (3)

Developing (2)

Needs Support (1)

Correctness

Pattern repeats correctly 4+ times with no errors

Pattern repeats 3 times with no errors

Pattern repeats but has 1-2 errors

Pattern doesn’t repeat correctly

Complexity

Uses ABC or more complex pattern

Uses AAB or ABB pattern

Uses AB pattern

Attempts pattern but no clear repetition

Creativity

Uses unique materials/combination

Uses standard materials creatively

Uses standard materials in typical way

Limited creativity shown

Explanation

Clearly explains pattern rule

Explains pattern with prompting

Partially explains pattern

Cannot explain pattern

Share to your friends!

Facebook

Sample Pattern Activities Bank

15 Ready-to-Use Activities for Immediate Implementation

  1. Pattern Train: Students use linking cubes to create pattern “trains”
  2. Body Patterns: Stand, sit, stand, sitβ€”create patterns with body positions
  3. Sound Patterns: Clap, stomp, clap, stompβ€”auditory patterns
  4. Snack Patterns: Use different colored cereal to create edible patterns
  5. Pattern Walk: Walk around school identifying patterns in environment
  6. Pattern Necklace: Thread beads to create wearable patterns
  7. Pattern Painting: Use sponge shapes to stamp patterns on paper
  8. Pattern Stories: Create simple pattern-based narratives
  9. Copy Cat Patterns: One student creates, another copies
  10. Pattern Bingo: Match pattern descriptions to pattern cards
  11. Pattern Memory: Flip cards to find matching pattern units
  12. Pattern Relay: Teams race to complete pattern sequences
  13. Pattern Dictation: Teacher describes, students create
  14. Pattern Gallery Walk: Students create patterns, class tours to observe
  15. Pattern Puzzles: Match pattern beginnings to correct endings

Disclaimer:

Some educational materials may be inspired by or aligned with DepEd curriculum standards.
However:

  • All materials uploaded or created are intended to support teachers and students.

  • If any copyrighted content is unintentionally shared, please contact us immediately for removal or proper attribution.

We respect intellectual property rights and respond promptly to valid copyright concerns.