Mapping Your Way — Class 5 Mathematics (CBSE)
Based on the NCERT Math Magic Grade 5 textbook. Learn to read maps, use directions, and understand scale, then solve the practice set without looking at the answers.
1. Why this chapter matters
Maps help us find our way in the world — from a simple classroom layout to a city map or a country outline. This chapter teaches students how to read maps, understand directions (north, south, east, west), use a scale to measure real distances, and identify landmarks. Map reading is a life skill that combines observation, measurement, and spatial thinking. It also connects to geography and social studies.
2. Directions
The four main directions are:
- North (N)
- South (S)
- East (E)
- West (W)
The four intermediate directions are:
- North-East (NE)
- North-West (NW)
- South-East (SE)
- South-West (SW)
Remembering directions
A simple way: 'Never Eat Soggy Worms' — North, East, South, West in clockwise order.
The sun rises in the east and sets in the west. At noon, if you face the sun in India, you are facing roughly south.
Direction changes
- Facing north, a right turn = east.
- Facing north, a left turn = west.
- Facing north, a half turn = south.
- Facing east, a right turn = south.
| Starting direction | Turn | New direction |
|---|---|---|
| North | Right | East |
| North | Left | West |
| East | Right | South |
| East | Left | North |
| South | Right | West |
| South | Left | East |
| West | Right | North |
| West | Left | South |
3. What is a map?
A map is a drawing of a place from above. It shows locations, roads, landmarks, and distances.
Features of a good map
- Title: Tells what the map shows (e.g., 'Map of My Neighbourhood').
- Direction arrow: Usually points north.
- Scale: Tells how much real distance is shown by a unit on the map.
- Symbols: Use simple pictures or icons for landmarks.
- Labels: Names of places, roads, buildings.
- Legend or key: Explains what the symbols mean.
4. Scale
A map is smaller than the actual place. The scale tells us the relationship between distance on the map and distance in reality.
Example: Scale 1 cm = 10 km means that 1 cm measured on the map equals 10 km in real life.
Using a scale
If the scale is 1 cm = 5 km, and the distance between two towns on the map is 8 cm:
Real distance = 8 x 5 = 40 km
If the real distance between two landmarks is 15 km and the scale is 1 cm = 5 km:
Map distance = 15 / 5 = 3 cm
| Map distance | Scale | Real distance |
|---|---|---|
| 4 cm | 1 cm = 10 km | 40 km |
| 6 cm | 1 cm = 2 km | 12 km |
| 2.5 cm | 1 cm = 4 km | 10 km |
| 10 cm | 1 cm = 1 km | 10 km |
5. Reading a map
Steps to read a map
- Find the title to know what area the map shows.
- Look for the north arrow to orient the map.
- Check the scale to understand distances.
- Find the legend to understand symbols.
- Locate your starting point and destination.
- Trace the route using roads, paths, or landmarks.
Sample map description
Imagine a simple map of a small town:
- The school is in the centre.
- The market is to the north of the school.
- The hospital is to the east of the school.
- The park is to the south of the school.
- The railway station is to the west of the school.
- A river flows from north to south on the east side.
Question: If you are at the school and need to go to the hospital, in which direction will you walk? Answer: East.
6. Routes and distances
Finding the shortest route between two places is an important skill.
Example
Places on a map:
- Home to School: path A (5 cm on map), path B (7 cm on map)
- Scale: 1 cm = 200 m
Path A real distance = 5 x 200 = 1000 m = 1 km Path B real distance = 7 x 200 = 1400 m = 1.4 km
Path A is shorter.
Word problems
Problem 1: On a map with scale 1 cm = 15 km, Delhi and Jaipur are 16 cm apart. What is the actual distance? Answer: 16 x 15 = 240 km.
Problem 2: The real distance between two villages is 9 km. On a map with scale 1 cm = 3 km, what is the distance on the map? Answer: 9 / 3 = 3 cm.
7. Landmarks
A landmark is a recognisable natural or man-made feature used for navigation.
| Natural landmarks | Man-made landmarks |
|---|---|
| Rivers | Schools |
| Mountains | Hospitals |
| Lakes | Railway stations |
| Forests | Markets |
| Hills | Temples, mosques, churches |
| Valleys | Bridges |
Describing a route using landmarks
'From the school gate, walk straight towards the big banyan tree (200 m north). Then turn right at the tree and walk past the post office (300 m east). The hospital is next to the post office.'
8. Drawing your own map
Activity: Draw a simple map of your route from home to school.
- Mark your home with a small square labelled 'Home'.
- Mark your school with a small square labelled 'School'.
- Draw the path or road connecting them.
- Mark important landmarks along the way (shops, parks, crossings).
- Add a north arrow and a scale.
- Write a legend explaining your symbols.
9. Common mistakes
- Mistake: Confusing left and right when turning on a map Fix: Imagine yourself actually walking on the road. Face the direction of travel, then decide left/right.
- Mistake: Forgetting to multiply by the scale factor Fix: Always write: map distance x scale = real distance. Check that the answer is reasonable.
- Mistake: Not orienting the map to the actual direction Fix: Turn the map so that the north arrow matches the actual north direction.
10. Key facts
- Four main directions: North, South, East, West.
- Intermediate directions: NE, NW, SE, SW.
- Scale converts map distance to real distance.
- A map has a title, direction arrow, scale, legend, and labels.
- Landmarks help describe routes.
- Always check the legend to understand map symbols.
- Practise by drawing maps of familiar places.
11. Self-test
- You are facing south. If you turn right, which direction do you face?
- A map scale is 1 cm = 25 km. Two cities are 6 cm apart on the map. What is the real distance?
- Name two features you would include in a map of your neighbourhood.
- If the real distance is 30 km and scale is 1 cm = 5 km, what is the map distance?
- In which direction does the sun rise? Where does it set?
12. Answer key
-
You are facing south. If you turn right, which direction do you face? Answer: West. (South -> right turn = West)
-
A map scale is 1 cm = 25 km. Two cities are 6 cm apart on the map. What is the real distance? Answer: 6 x 25 = 150 km.
-
Name two features you would include in a map of your neighbourhood. Answer: (Any two) School, park, hospital, market, temple, bus stop, railway station, river, main road.
-
If the real distance is 30 km and scale is 1 cm = 5 km, what is the map distance? Answer: 30 / 5 = 6 cm.
-
In which direction does the sun rise? Where does it set? Answer: The sun rises in the east and sets in the west.
13. Quick revision
- Use the four main directions to describe locations.
- Map scale converts map length to real distance.
- A map needs a title, north arrow, scale, and legend.
- Describe routes step by step with landmarks.
- Practise drawing maps of familiar routes.
- Read maps by first checking title, north, scale, and legend.
