Session 2 — Patterns Everywhere
Duration: 60 min · Format: live online · Ages: 8–11
Session goal: by the end, students can spot patterns around them, sort things into groups (classify), and predict what comes next.
Before class — prep (5 min)
- Have the two diagrams below ready to share on screen (predict the next shape and sorting into groups).
- Have a small box of mixed objects (toys, blocks, crayons) near you to demo sorting, and ask students to gather a few small objects too.
- Ask students to have paper and a pencil ready.
- Open Quick, Draw! in a tab in case you want to show classifying in action.
Agenda
| Time | Segment |
|---|---|
| 0:00 | Hook — clap-and-stomp pattern (5 min) |
| 0:05 | Teach — what is a pattern (12 min) |
| 0:17 | Teach — sorting into groups = classifying (13 min) |
| 0:30 | Activity — sorting champion + make a pattern (20 min) |
| 0:50 | Check for understanding (7 min) |
| 0:57 | Wrap-up + homework (3 min) |
0:00 · Hook (5 min)
Ask the class to clap this out loud with you: clap – stomp – clap – stomp – clap – …
- "What comes next?" Let them call it out (chat or unmute).
- Reveal: that's a pattern — something that repeats by a rule. Their brain guessed the next part super fast.
- Tell them: that's exactly the AI superpower — and today they become pattern-spotters themselves.
0:05 · Teach — What is a pattern? (12 min)
Explain: a pattern is something that repeats in a way you can predict. Once you know the rule, you can guess what's next.
Share this diagram:
Ask: "Circle, triangle, circle, triangle, circle… what shape comes next?" (Take a few answers — the rule is circle, triangle, repeating.)
Point out that patterns are everywhere:
- Day and night, over and over
- Stripes on a zebra
- The beat in a favourite song
- The days of the week
⚠ Watch for this: students sometimes call any group of things a "pattern." Stress that a pattern must repeat by a rule you can predict — otherwise you can't guess what's next.
0:17 · Teach — Sorting into groups = Classifying (13 min)
Explain: when you put things into groups, you are classifying. AI does this all the time — remember from Session 1 how it sorted pictures into "cat" or "dog"? Those groups are called classes.
Share this diagram:
- To sort, you look for clues: Is it round or pointy? What colour? How big? AI looks for clues too.
- Key point to land: guessing "cat!" is really just sorting a picture into the cat group. Classifying is the AI's #1 job.
⚠ Watch for the mix-up: a pattern is what repeats; classifying is sorting things into groups using clues. They connect (AI spots patterns to decide which group), but they're not the same word.
Ask: "What clues might an AI use to tell a cat from a dog?" (Take 2–3 answers — ear shape, whiskers, nose, size.)
0:30 · Activity (20 min)
Activity 1 — Sorting champion (≈10 min, no computer). Have students grab a box of small things (toys, blocks, crayons) and sort them into 2 or 3 groups. Then have a partner (or you, on shared screen) guess the rule — by colour? by size? by shape?
- Demo first: sort your own box on camera and let students guess your rule.
- Circulate/watch for: rules that don't actually separate the items cleanly — ask "could something belong to both groups?" to sharpen their clue.
Activity 2 — Make a pattern (≈10 min). Have students draw or build a repeating pattern (like triangle, circle, triangle, circle). Then a partner adds the next 3 items.
Debrief: "If your partner found your rule, that's exactly what an AI does — spot the pattern, then predict what comes next."
0:50 · Check for understanding (7 min)
Ask these aloud or drop them in the chat. Answer key (for you):
- In the shapes picture, what comes next? → A triangle — the rule is circle, triangle, circle, triangle…
- What do we call sorting things into groups? → Classifying — and the groups are called classes.
- What clues might an AI use to tell a cat from a dog? → Things like ear shape, whiskers, nose, and size — the AI looks for repeating patterns in the pictures.
0:57 · Wrap-up + homework (3 min)
- Ask one student to finish the sentence: "A pattern is…"
- Homework — Pattern hunter: find 3 patterns at home or outside, and invent one secret pattern to challenge a family member to continue. Bring them to Session 3.
Teaching notes
- Correct this misconception: "any group is a pattern." Reframe — a pattern repeats by a rule you can predict; classifying is sorting with clues.
- Fast finishers (extension): introduce the word features — the clues an AI uses to decide (pointy ears, whiskers, colour); more helpful features → better sorting. Then peek at a neural network: a big team of tiny helpers, each checking one small clue ("pointy ears? yes/no") and voting on the answer. Challenge: pick two animals and write 3 features that tell them apart — exactly what you'd teach an AI.
- Low-tech fallback: if some students have no objects handy, run Activity 1 as a whole class using items on your desk, or have them sort things they can see in their room by colour and size.
Vocabulary
| Term | Meaning |
|---|---|
| Pattern | Something that repeats by a rule |
| Classify / Sort | Putting things into groups |
| Class / Group | One of the groups (like "cats") |
| Predict | Guess what comes next |
| Clue / Feature | The hint used to decide (ears, colour…) |
Resources
- Quick, Draw! — watch it classify drawings into groups.
- Code.org — Hour of Code — fun pattern & logic puzzles.
- Teachable Machine — next session students teach it to classify.
Next session
Session 3 — Teach the Computer: students train their very own AI to tell two things apart.