Choose exam board for KS4 Computer Science (GCSE)
Choose exam board for KS4 English
Choose exam board for KS4 French
Choose exam board for KS4 Geography
Choose exam board for KS4 German
Choose exam board for KS4 History
Choose tier for KS4 Maths
Choose exam board for KS4 Music
Choose exam board for KS4 Physical education (GCSE)
Choose exam board for KS4 Religious education (GCSE)
Choose exam board for KS4 Spanish

      Lesson details

      Learning outcome

      I can count in binary and I can perform addition in binary.

      Key learning points

      1. The process of counting in binary follows the same principle as decimal.
      2. Binary addition can be achieved with the following facts: 0+0 = 0, 0+1 = 1, 1+1 = 10 and 1+1+1 = 11.

      Keywords

      • Addition - a mathematical operation where two or more numbers are combined to find their total

      • Carry - the extra value that moves to the next column when the sum of digits in a place value exceeds the base

      Common misconception

      Pupils will often default to decimal addition, in the fact that 1+1 = 2, whereas in binary 1+1 = 10.

      Remind students that binary only has two digits; 0 and 1. Use the comparisons between binary and decimal addition in the slide deck to illustrate the differences.

      Teacher tip

      Model to students the process using the layout modelled in the slide deck. This models how they would do addition in maths, so pupils should be familiar with the process.

      Licence

      This content is © Oak National Academy Limited (2025), licensed on Open Government Licence version 3.0
      except where otherwise stated. See Oak's terms & conditions
      (Collection 2).

      Lesson video

      Loading...

      Prior knowledge starter quiz

      6 Questions

      Q1.
      Binary is a base number system.

      Correct Answer: 2, two

      Q2.
      What digits are used in binary?

      Correct answer: 1 and 0
      0 to 9
      0 to 100

      Q3.
      In the decimal number 3,728 what digit is in the hundreds place?

      3
      Correct answer: 7
      2
      8

      Q4.
      What is the value of the '1' in the binary number 10,000?

      Correct Answer: 16, sixteen

      Q5.
      What is the decimal equivalent of the binary number 11011?

      Correct Answer: 27, twenty-seven, twenty seven

      Q6.
      What is the binary representation of the decimal number 53?

      Correct answer: 110101
      100100
      111111
      101101

      6 Questions

      Q1.
      Counting in binary follows similar principles to counting in .

      Correct Answer: decimal

      Q2.
      Match the binary addition rule to the correct result.

      Correct Answer:0 + 0,0

      0

      Correct Answer:0 + 1,1

      1

      Correct Answer:1 + 1,10

      10

      Correct Answer:1 + 1 + 1,11

      11

      Q3.
      Add together these two binary numbers: 1010 + 101

      Correct Answer: 1111

      Q4.
      Add together these two binary numbers: 1111 + 111

      Correct Answer: 10110

      Q5.
      What is the maximum decimal number that can be represented by 5 binary digits?

      Correct answer: 31
      15
      5
      11111

      Q6.
      Add together these three binary numbers: 100 + 10 + 1

      Correct Answer: 111

      To help you plan your 10 computer science lesson on: Binary addition, download all teaching resources for free and adapt to suit your pupils' needs...