St John Fisher Primary, a Catholic Voluntary Academy, Sheffield
Our FS2 workshop: 'Supporting Learning at Home' is on Monday 9th February 2026, at 3.30pm in the Y6 classroom. Supervised childcare will be available. This is for all FS2 parents and carers, so please try and come, and notify the office if you would like to attend. Thank you. | Looking for a great school? We have places! All children are welcome! | Excellent Y6 SATs outcomes -- Maths 84% (National 74%) -- Reading 87% (National 75%) -- Writing 87% (National 72%) -- Grammar, Punctuation & Spelling 87% (National 73%) -- Combined 81% (National 62%) | RESPECT is our learning value for Term 3. For more information, please click here. | SJF Community Carol Concert 2025: Both parts are now available to view via this link. Thank you. | Term 3 Wake Up! Shake Up! videos are available here  | SJF Book List 2025-26: please click here | Latest Newsletters: Click here | The School Office is open between 8.30am and 4.30pm. Please call between those times if you wish to speak to someone, otherwise you can leave a message. Thank you.
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Y1: Investigating 2D Shape

20th Oct 2019

We are learning about 2D shapes.

We have named  and described a square, rectangle, circle and triangle. 

We have also been considering features like how many sides a shape has, how many corners and if sides are curved or straight. 

As well as this we have been thinking about how a square and rectangle are the same and different! 

Please support your child at home by talking about shapes in the environment.  E.g the window pane may be a rectangle, a road sign might be a circle or triangle or shape. 

We will also be making 2D shape pictures and spotting shapes on a walk around school. 

 

For information

2D shapes have only two dimensions, such as width and height, but no thickness and so they cannot be picked up and held.

Shapes like squares, circles, triangles, etc. are two-dimensional or "2D" shapes.

If an individual shape can be picked up then it is three-dimensional or "3D".

Sometimes people think that very flat shapes are 2D, simply because they are so thin. This is wrong. Any shape that can be held, even a very flat and thin one, is actually 3D whereas a shape that appears, for example, on a poster, in a book or is drawn onto a piece of paper is 2D.