Shape Codes: Decode the Message!
Using the key above: What does π· mean? What does πΊπ΅π΄ spell? What does β€οΈπ΅πΊπ· spell? What does π΄π΅β spell?
The key tells you what each shape means:
π΅ Circle = A, π΄ Square = B, πΊ Triangle = C
β Star = D, π· Diamond = E, β€οΈ Heart = F
For πΊπ΅π΄, look up each shape:
πΊ = C, π΅ = A, π΄ = B
Put them together: C + A + B = CAB
For β€οΈπ΅πΊπ·:
β€οΈ = F, π΅ = A, πΊ = C, π· = E
Put them together: F + A + C + E = FACE
For π΄π΅β:
π΄ = B, π΅ = A, β = D
Put them together: B + A + D = BAD
Answers:
π· = E (the diamond shape represents E)
πΊπ΅π΄ = CAB (Triangle-Circle-Square = C-A-B)
β€οΈπ΅πΊπ· = FACE (Heart-Circle-Triangle-Diamond = F-A-C-E)
π΄π΅β = BAD (Square-Circle-Star = B-A-D)
Key insight: Codes work by creating a consistent mapping between symbols. Once you know the key (shapeβletter), you can decode anything written in that code!
Try this: Can you encode your name using these shapes?
π€ Which thinking lens(es) did you use?
Select all the lenses you used:
π± A Small Everyday Story
"What does this say?"
"Let me check the key..."
"Triangle is C, circle is A..."
"CAB! It spells CAB!"
Decoding is detective work.
See more guidance β
π§ Thinking habits this builds:
- Using reference materials (the key)
- Sequential decoding (left to right)
- Symbol-to-meaning translation
- Checking work against the key
πΏ Behaviors you may notice (and reinforce):
- Referring back to the key consistently
- Decoding one symbol at a time
- Checking if the decoded word makes sense
- Wanting to create their own coded messages
How to reinforce: "You checked the key for each shape! That's exactly how professional code-breakers work."
π When ideas are still forming:
Children might mix up similar shapes or forget to check the key.
Helpful response: "Let's go back to the key. Point to each shape and say its letter out loud."
π¬ If you want to go deeper:
- Can you create a secret message for a friend?
- What if we added more shapes for more letters?
- How is this like the alphabet we use every day?
Key concepts (for adults): Symbol systems, substitution codes, mapping relationships, literacy foundations.