Direction Sense
Direction sense is the ability to navigate space — to follow instructions, judge relative position and eventually read maps. CTET treats it as a goldmine for tricky perspective-taking questions, so it is worth separating the ideas carefully. Left and right are lateral directions tied to the body, and they are self-referential: my left becomes your right the moment we face each other, which is why a child often mirrors the teacher and gets confused. Up and down are different — they are absolute, fixed by gravity towards the sky and the ground, and they do not change however the child turns. The cardinal directions add the compass: the Sun rises in the East and sets in the West, with North opposite South. A simple anchor children can use without any compass is to face the rising Sun — then East is in front, West behind, North to the left and South to the right. Finally there is following directions: executing a sequence of turns from a starting point, which leans on working memory and, crucially, on updating your bearings after each turn. This last point is where most CTET traps live. After a child turns right, whatever used to be on the right is now straight ahead, and candidates who forget to re-orient pick the wrong answer.
✅ Solved examples
✏️ Practice — try these, take hints as needed
📝 Topic test — 8 questions
Auto-graded with full solutions; saved to your dashboard. Use the calculator and formula sheet (top-right) any time.
Key Concepts — Quick Reference
Spatial vocabulary and direction (the words children must master)
| Position words | above / below, inside / outside, near / far, between, before / after |
|---|---|
| Lateral directions | left and right — self-referential, they flip when you face someone |
| Absolute directions | up and down — fixed by gravity, do not depend on which way you face |
| Cardinal directions | Sun RISES in the East, SETS in the West; North opposite South |
Shapes and visualisation (what the eye and mind do)
| 2-D shapes | flat, two dimensions — circle, square, triangle, rectangle |
|---|---|
| 3-D shapes | solid, three dimensions — sphere, cube, cone, cylinder |
| Faces, edges, vertices | cube = 6 faces, 12 edges, 8 vertices (counting practice for kids) |
| Visualisation | picturing how a shape looks when folded, rotated, cut or seen from another side |