← L² Lab
🧱 Sequence
Card 03
1️⃣ TWO 3️⃣ FOUR 5️⃣ ❓

What comes next in each pattern?

💭 How to Think About This

Pattern A: 1, TWO, 3, FOUR, 5, ? — Pattern B: 1, 2, THREE, FOUR, 5, 6, ?, ? — Notice TWO things changing: the number values AND whether they're numerals or words!

🔒 Start writing to unlock hints

In these patterns, you need to track TWO separate things:

1. What NUMBER comes next? (counting up)

2. Should it be a NUMERAL (like "6") or a WORD (like "SIX")?

Pattern A alternates EVERY time!

Numeral, word, numeral, word, numeral...

Odd positions (1st, 3rd, 5th) are numerals. Even positions (2nd, 4th, 6th) are words.

Pattern B switches in PAIRS!

Two numerals, then two words, then two numerals...

It's like: numeral-numeral, word-word, numeral-numeral, word-word...

For Pattern A: Position 6 is even, so it should be a WORD = "SIX"

For Pattern B: After numerals 5, 6, the next pair should be words = "SEVEN", "EIGHT"

Does your answer follow the rule you discovered?

Pattern A: Simple Alternation

Rule: Format switches EVERY time — numeral, word, numeral, word...

Answer: SIX (as a word) — because odd positions are numerals, even positions are words.

Pattern B: Double Alternation

Rule: Format switches in PAIRS — two numerals, two words, two numerals...

Answer: SEVEN, EIGHT (as words) — because after a pair of numerals comes a pair of words.

Key skill: When patterns mix formats, always ask: "What's the RULE for when it switches?" Simple patterns alternate every time. Complex patterns might switch in groups!

🤔 Which thinking lens(es) did you use?

Select all the lenses you used:

👨‍👩‍👧 For Parents & Teachers

🌱 A Small Everyday Story

"What's next?"
"Seven?"
"Yes, but HOW should we write it?"
"Oh! There are TWO patterns at once!"
Noticing complexity is a skill.

See more guidance →

🧠 Thinking habits this builds:

  • Tracking multiple variables simultaneously
  • Distinguishing between simple and complex patterns
  • Finding the "rule" behind a sequence
  • Testing predictions against patterns

🌿 Behaviors you may notice (and reinforce):

  • Separating number value from number format
  • Stating the rule explicitly before predicting
  • Checking if the prediction follows the rule
  • Noticing when patterns switch in groups vs. every time

How to reinforce: "You found a rule AND tested it! That's exactly how mathematicians work."

🔄 When ideas are still forming:

Children might only notice one pattern (the counting) and miss the format switching.

Helpful response: "You got the number right! Now look at HOW each number is written. Do you see another pattern?"

🔬 If you want to go deeper:

  • Can you create a pattern that switches every THREE items?
  • What if we added a third variable (like color)?
  • How would you describe these patterns to a friend?

Key concepts (for adults): Multi-variable patterns, pattern recognition, rule extraction, periodicity.