By the end of this chapter you'll be able to…

  • 1Explain and apply: reading maps, using directions, grids, symbols, and location clues
  • 2Choose suitable operations for word problems
  • 3Use diagrams, tables, or models to support reasoning
  • 4Check answers with estimation or reverse thinking
💡
Why this chapter matters
Maps and Locations helps Class 5 students build Mathematics confidence through clear concepts, activity-based learning, and short answer practice aligned to the current CBSE/NCERT style.

Before you start — revise these

A 5-minute refresher here will save you 30 minutes of confusion below.

Maps and Locations - Class 5 Mathematics (CBSE)

Based on the current NCERT Maths Mela Grade 5 sequence. Read the idea, try the activity, then solve the practice set without looking at the answers.


1. Why this chapter matters

Maps and Locations uses familiar Class 5 situations to make mathematics feel usable. Instead of treating maths as a list of sums, this chapter asks students to notice information, choose a method, explain the method, and check whether the answer makes sense.

The main focus is reading maps, using directions, grids, symbols, and location clues. This is useful in notebooks, oral questions, class activities, and competency-based school tests because teachers often ask students to explain how they know, not just write the final number.

2. Core ideas

Idea 1

Maps show places from above in a smaller form.

Method 2

Directions such as north, south, east, and west help locate places.

Skill 3

A grid uses rows and columns to describe position.

3. Worked examples

Example 1: If the library is east of the classroom, which direction is the classroom from the library?

West.

Check: The answer uses the correct operation and keeps the unit or context clear.

Example 2: In grid B3, what do B and 3 show?

B usually shows the column or row label, and 3 shows the matching row or column number.

Check: The answer uses the correct operation and keeps the unit or context clear.

4. Activity corner

Draw a simple map of your classroom with a compass arrow and five symbols.

Write your activity answer in three parts:

  • What I observed
  • What I calculated or compared
  • What mathematical idea this shows

5. Common mistakes

  • Mistake: Solving before reading the whole word problem Fix: Circle the data, underline the question, and then choose the operation.
  • Mistake: Forgetting units such as cm, m, kg, L, minutes, or rupees Fix: Write the unit with every final answer.
  • Mistake: Doing only exact calculation without checking reasonableness Fix: Use estimation or reverse operation to catch impossible answers.

6. How to write better answers

  1. Write the given numbers and units first.
  2. Show the operation or reasoning step.
  3. Use a diagram, table, grid, or number line if it makes the answer clearer.
  4. Write the final answer in a complete sentence.
  5. Check the answer by estimation, reverse operation, or common sense.

7. Practice set

  1. Name the four main directions.
  2. Why do maps use symbols?
  3. What is a grid reference?
  4. Why must a map have a key?
  5. If the gate is north of the garden, where is the garden from the gate?
  6. List three symbols for a school map.

8. Answer key

  1. Name the four main directions. Answer: North, south, east, and west.

  2. Why do maps use symbols? Answer: Symbols save space and make maps easy to read.

  3. What is a grid reference? Answer: A letter-number or row-column clue that locates a place.

  4. Why must a map have a key? Answer: The key explains what symbols mean.

  5. If the gate is north of the garden, where is the garden from the gate? Answer: South.

  6. List three symbols for a school map. Answer: Classroom, office, playground, library, washroom, or gate symbols.

9. Quick revision

  • Main focus: reading maps, using directions, grids, symbols, and location clues.
  • Maps show places from above in a smaller form.
  • Directions such as north, south, east, and west help locate places.
  • A grid uses rows and columns to describe position.
  • Learn by doing the activity once, not by memorising only the final answers.
  • Keep units clear and show steps for partial marks.

Key formulas & results

Everything you need to memorise, in one card. Screenshot this for revision.

Core idea
Maps show places from above in a smaller form.
Maps show places from above in a smaller form.
Math move
Directions such as north, south, east, and west help locate places.
Directions such as north, south, east, and west help locate places.
Exam habit
A grid uses rows and columns to describe position.
A grid uses rows and columns to describe position.
⚠️

Common mistakes & fixes

These are the exact errors that cost students marks in board exams. Read them once, save yourself the trouble.

WATCH OUT
Solving before reading the whole word problem
Circle the data, underline the question, and then choose the operation.
WATCH OUT
Forgetting units such as cm, m, kg, L, minutes, or rupees
Write the unit with every final answer.
WATCH OUT
Doing only exact calculation without checking reasonableness
Use estimation or reverse operation to catch impossible answers.

Practice problems

Try each one yourself before tapping "Show solution". Active recall > rereading.

Q1EASY· Direction
Name the four main directions.
Show solution
North, south, east, and west.
Q2EASY· Symbol
Why do maps use symbols?
Show solution
Symbols save space and make maps easy to read.
Q3MEDIUM· Grid
What is a grid reference?
Show solution
A letter-number or row-column clue that locates a place.
Q4MEDIUM· Reasoning
Why must a map have a key?
Show solution
The key explains what symbols mean.
Q5MEDIUM· Application
If the gate is north of the garden, where is the garden from the gate?
Show solution
South.
Q6HARD· Create
List three symbols for a school map.
Show solution
Classroom, office, playground, library, washroom, or gate symbols.

5-minute revision

The whole chapter, distilled. Read this the night before the exam.

  • Maps and Locations is part of the current Class 5 Mathematics learning set.
  • Core idea: Maps show places from above in a smaller form.
  • Math move: Directions such as north, south, east, and west help locate places.
  • Exam habit: A grid uses rows and columns to describe position.
  • Use complete sentences and neat labels in school notebooks.
  • Give examples from home, school, nature, maps, stories, or digital life whenever possible.

CBSE marks blueprint

Where the marks come from in this chapter — so you can plan your prep.

Typical chapter weightage: 5-10 marks in school tests, oral checks, notebooks, projects, or periodic assessments

Question typeMarks eachTypical countWhat it tests
Very Short12-4Definitions, vocabulary, facts, quick calculations, or direct observation
Short Answer2-31-2Reasoning, examples, diagrams, grammar usage, steps, or explanation
Activity / Project3-50-1Creative application, notebook presentation, data, map, model, performance, or reflection
Prep strategy
  • Read the chapter once for meaning before memorising answers
  • Write two examples from your own life
  • Practise one activity or diagram in the notebook
  • Revise new words, terms, or steps aloud

Where this shows up in the real world

This chapter isn't just an exam topic — it lives in the world around you.

reading maps, using directions, grids, symbols, and location clues

Useful for everyday observation, clear communication, school projects, and confident problem solving.

Choose suitable operations for word problems

Useful for everyday observation, clear communication, school projects, and confident problem solving.

Use diagrams, tables, or models to support reasoning

Useful for everyday observation, clear communication, school projects, and confident problem solving.

Exam strategy

Battle-tested tips from teachers and toppers for this chapter.

  1. Underline the command word: name, explain, compare, calculate, draw, describe, or give reasons
  2. Answer in steps when a question has more than one part
  3. Use diagrams, tables, examples, or labelled points where they make the answer clearer
  4. Check spelling of chapter terms and keep the final answer concise

Going beyond the textbook

For olympiad aspirants and curious learners — topics that build on this chapter.

  • Create one extra question on Maps and Locations and solve it in your own words.
  • Find one real-life example beyond the textbook and explain the connection.

Where else this chapter is tested

CBSE board isn't the only one — other exams test this chapter too.

CBSE Class 5 School AssessmentHigh
Class 5 Foundation / Olympiad PracticeMedium
Notebook and Activity EvaluationHigh

Questions students ask

The real ones — pulled from the Q&A community and tutor sessions.

Read the summary, explain the key ideas aloud, solve the practice set without looking at the answers, and redo the activity or diagram once.

Yes. Class 5 assessments usually test understanding through short answers, activities, vocabulary, examples, diagrams, and simple reasoning.
Verified by the tuition.in editorial team
Last reviewed on 26 May 2026. Written and reviewed by subject-matter experts — read about our process.
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