Solids Around Us (3-D Shapes) • Topic 4 of 4

Sorting and Classification

Sorting solids is where identification turns into reasoning, and it is the pedagogy-friendly part of the chapter. Instead of just naming shapes, children group them by a chosen property - and the property they pick reveals how well they understand the solids. Useful sorting rules include: which solids can roll (sphere, cylinder and cone, because they all have a curved surface) versus which cannot (cube and cuboid, with only flat faces); which solids can be stacked stably (cube, cuboid and cylinder, because they have flat faces to rest on) versus which cannot (a sphere always rolls away, and a cone is unstable on its point); which solids have any flat face (all except the sphere); and which have a vertex (the cube, cuboid and cone) versus which have none (cylinder and sphere). A single solid can fall into several groups at once - a cylinder both rolls and stacks - and noticing that a shape belongs to more than one category is a sign of genuine understanding, not rote memory. In the classroom this is taught through hands-on sorting: give children a tray of real objects and let them group, regroup and explain their rule. Mistakes are valuable here, because the way a child sorts shows the teacher exactly which property the child is focusing on and which they are missing. The skill being built - observing a property, applying it consistently and justifying the grouping - is early logical classification, and the NCF treats it as a foundation for later geometry.

✅ Solved examples

1. A child is asked to sort solids into "can roll" and "cannot roll". Which solids go into each group, and why?
Can roll: sphere, cylinder and cone - each has a curved surface. Cannot roll: cube and cuboid - they have only flat faces. The dividing property is the presence of a curved surface.
2. Which solids can be stacked stably on a flat table, and which cannot?
Cube, cuboid and cylinder stack well because each has at least one flat face to rest on. A sphere rolls away and a cone tips over on its point, so they do not stack stably.
3. A teacher notices a child places the cylinder in BOTH the "rolls" group and the "stacks" group. Is the child wrong?
No - the child is correct and is reasoning well. A cylinder rolls on its curved surface and stacks on its flat circular ends, so it genuinely belongs to both groups. Recognising overlapping categories shows real understanding.
4. If you sort the five solids by "has at least one flat face", which solid is left out, and what does that tell you about it?
The sphere is left out - it is the only solid with no flat face, having a single curved surface. This is the property that makes a sphere unique among the five.

✏️ Practice — try these, take hints as needed

1. Sort the five solids into "has a vertex" and "has no vertex".
A vertex is a sharp corner.
Curved-only and roll-around shapes may have none.
Has a vertex: cube, cuboid, cone. No vertex: cylinder, sphere
2. Why does a child sorting objects into solid families learn more from this activity than from simply being told the names?
Think about what the child has to do, not just hear.
They observe, apply a rule and explain.
Sorting requires the child to actively observe properties, apply a rule consistently and justify the grouping - this builds logical classification skills rather than rote recall
3. A solid can roll but cannot be stacked stably and comes to a point. Which solid fits this rule?
It has a curved surface, so it rolls.
Its single vertex makes it unstable.
Cone
4. From a teaching point of view, why is a child's "wrong" sorting still useful to the teacher?
What does the grouping reveal?
Errors are diagnostic clues.
A child's sorting shows which property they are focusing on and which they have missed, giving the teacher a diagnostic window into the child's understanding

📝 Topic test — 8 questions

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