Shapes Around Us — Class 4 Mathematics (CBSE)
From the current NCERT Maths Mela Grade 4 book, Chapter 1. Shapes are everywhere — let us look at flat shapes, solid shapes, and how they connect.
1. Why this chapter matters
The world is full of shapes — flat ones like a window, and solid ones like a box or a ball. Knowing the names of shapes and their parts (faces, edges, corners) helps us describe objects, build models, and see patterns around us.
2. Core ideas
Idea 1 — Flat (2D) and solid (3D) shapes
2D shapes are flat: square, rectangle, circle, triangle. 3D shapes are solid: cube, cuboid, sphere, cylinder, cone, prism, pyramid.
Method 2 — Solids have faces, edges, and corners
A face is a flat or curved surface; an edge is where two faces meet; a corner (vertex) is where edges meet. A cube has 6 faces, 12 edges, and 8 corners.
Skill 3 — A net folds into a solid
A net is a flat shape that folds to make a 3D shape. A cube's net is 6 squares joined together.
3. Worked examples
Example 1: How many faces, edges, and corners does a cube have?
A cube has 6 faces, 12 edges, and 8 corners.
Example 2: Name the 2D faces of a cuboid (matchbox).
Its faces are rectangles (6 rectangular faces).
Example 3: Which solid has a curved surface and rolls?
A sphere (also a cylinder and a cone have curved surfaces).
4. Activity corner
Cut out a net of 6 squares and fold it into a cube. Then collect three objects and note their shapes. Write:
- The net you folded and the solid it made
- Three objects and their solid shapes
- The maths idea (faces, edges, corners of solids)
5. Common mistakes
- Mistake: Confusing a 2D shape with a 3D shape (square vs cube). Fix: A square is flat (2D); a cube is solid (3D).
- Mistake: Mixing up edges and corners. Fix: An edge is a line where two faces meet; a corner is a point where edges meet.
- Mistake: Thinking any 6 squares make a cube net. Fix: Only certain arrangements of 6 squares fold into a cube.
6. How to write better answers
- Say whether the shape is 2D (flat) or 3D (solid).
- Name the shape.
- Give its faces, edges, and corners if it is a solid.
- Add a real object as an example.
7. Practice set
- Name two 2D shapes and two 3D shapes.
- How many faces, edges, and corners does a cube have?
- What 2D shape are the faces of a cuboid?
- Name a solid that has a curved surface.
- How many squares are in the net of a cube?
- Is a football a 2D or a 3D shape? Name it.
8. Answer key
- 2D: square, circle; 3D: cube, sphere (answers may vary).
- 6 faces, 12 edges, 8 corners.
- Rectangles.
- A sphere (or cylinder, or cone).
- 6 squares.
- 3D; it is a sphere.
9. Quick revision
- 2D shapes are flat; 3D shapes are solid.
- Solids have faces, edges, and corners.
- A cube: 6 faces, 12 edges, 8 corners.
- A net folds into a solid (a cube net = 6 squares).
- Sphere, cylinder, and cone have curved surfaces.
