Learning aim
Pupils can set a savings goal, calculate how long it takes to reach it given a weekly amount, and explain why saving takes patience.
National Curriculum links
- Maths Y4: Money: estimate, compare and calculate different measures, including money in pounds and pence
- Maths Y4: Number: multiplication and division in real-life contexts
- PSHE Association KS2 L19: to recognise the benefits of, and that there are different ways to save, money
What you'll need
- Savings goal cards (a £15 game, a £25 trip, a £50 bike, a £100 console)
- Weekly saving rate cards (£1, £2, £5, £10 per week)
- Saving timeline worksheet
- Savings goal planner
Lesson structure (45 minutes)
HOOK
TEACH
GUIDED
CHALLENGE
PLENARY
Adapting for all learners
Support (working below ARE)
Use round numbers only (£10 goal, £1 per week; £20 goal, £2 per week). Provide a 10-square grid to physically tick off each week.
Stretch (working above ARE)
Use larger goals (£100 console). Add a complication: "You earn £5 per week but spend £1 of it on snacks. Net saving = £4. How long until you reach £100?" Stretch further: "Could you cut your snack spending to save faster?"
SEND adaptations
For pupils with dyscalculia: limit goals to multiples of the weekly amount (so division is clean). Use multiplication grids. For pupils with autism: provide a structured visual planner with weeks pre-printed.
EAL support
Vocabulary: "goal", "weekly", "rate", "patience", "save up", "reach". Sentence stems: "My goal is to save ___. I save ___ each week. It will take ___ weeks."
Assessment criteria
Pupils can: (1) calculate the number of weeks needed to reach a goal given a weekly amount; (2) modify the calculation when a one-off boost is added; (3) explain in their own words why bigger goals take longer.
Homework pack
Four planning activities about reaching a saving goal. ~25 minutes.
Goal planner
What pupils do: Choose a real saving goal: something you want that costs between £15 and £50. Write: (1) the price, (2) how much you can save per week, (3) how many weeks needed.
Expected output: A 3-line goal plan.
Marking guidance: 1 mark per accurate line. 3 marks total.
Saving graph
What pupils do: Draw a graph showing your goal-saving progress over 8 weeks. Mark how much you would have after each week. When do you hit your goal?
Expected output: A bar or line chart with weeks on x-axis and amount saved on y-axis.
Marking guidance: 2 marks for accurate graph, 1 mark for marking the goal-hit week.
Speed it up
What pupils do: You want to reach your goal faster. Write 3 different ways to do this (save more per week, find extra income, ask for goal money for your birthday, etc.).
Expected output: A list of 3 ways to reach a goal faster.
Marking guidance: 1 mark per realistic idea. 3 marks total.
Extension (optional)
What pupils do: A friend wants to save £100 in 10 weeks. They earn £8 per week. Can they do it? Write a 3-sentence answer with maths.
Expected output: A 3-sentence reply with calculation.
Marking guidance: 2 marks for correct calculation (£80, no), 1 mark for clarity.
Family discussion prompt (safeguarding-aware)
Ask a grown-up: "What is something you saved up for that took you a long time? Was it worth the wait?"
Classroom safeguarding
Related lesson plans
- What's a bank account and why have one? (KS2 · Year 4)
- Comparison shopping — finding the best deal (KS2 · Year 5)
- All KS2 + KS1 lesson plans →