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  1. ISEE Lower Level Mathematics Achievement
  2. Reading Coordinates — Identify coordinates of a point on a grid.

ISEE LOWER LEVEL: MATHEMATICS ACHIEVEMENT • COORDINATE GEOMETRY

Reading Coordinates — Identify coordinates of a point on a grid.

Learn how to name the exact location of any point on a grid using two simple numbers.

SECTION 1

Where Did Coordinates Come From?

Have you ever played a game of battleship or found a seat in a movie theater using a row letter and seat number? People have been using systems like these for hundreds of years! The idea of using coordinates (a pair of numbers that describe a location) was invented by a French mathematician who liked to lie in bed and watch flies crawl on his ceiling.

Ancient Times
Early Maps & Grids
Ancient Egyptians and Romans used grid-like systems to map land and plan cities. They needed a way to describe exact locations.
1637
René Descartes Invents the Coordinate Plane
The French thinker René Descartes created a system of two number lines that cross. Legend says he got the idea watching a fly on his ceiling!
1700s
Scientists Use Coordinates
Scientists began using coordinates to make graphs, map the stars, and track the paths of moving objects.
Today
Coordinates Are Everywhere
GPS navigation, video games, and phone maps all use coordinates to pinpoint locations. You use them more than you realize!

So here is the big question: if someone places a dot on a grid, how do you describe exactly where it is using just two numbers? That is what this lesson will teach you!

SECTION 2

Core Ideas You Need to Know

Before we start reading points on a grid, let's learn the important vocabulary. These are the building blocks you will use every time you work with coordinates.

1

Coordinate Plane

A flat surface made by two number lines that cross at a point called the origin. Think of it as a giant sheet of graph paper.
2

X-Axis (Horizontal)

The number line that goes left and right, like the ground you walk on. It tells you how far to move sideways.
3

Y-Axis (Vertical)

The number line that goes up and down, like an elevator. It tells you how far to move up from the bottom.
4

Origin (0, 0)

The special point where the x-axis and y-axis cross. Its coordinates are always (0, 0). This is your starting point!
5

Ordered Pair (x, y)

Two numbers written inside parentheses, separated by a comma. The first number is the x-coordinate, and the second is the y-coordinate.
✦ KEY TAKEAWAY
Think of coordinates like finding a seat in a stadium. The first number is your section number (how far you walk along the hallway), and the second number is your row number (how far you climb up the stairs). You always walk the hallway first, then climb. With coordinates, you always go across first (x), then up (y)!
SECTION 3

See It on a Grid

The diagram below shows a coordinate plane with several points plotted on it. Notice how each point sits where two grid lines cross. Study the diagram and see if you can figure out each point's coordinates before reading the caption!

Coordinate Plane with Labeled Points01234567012345xyA (2, 2)B (4, 4)C (6, 1)D (1, 5)Origin (0, 0)
This coordinate plane shows four points: A at (2, 2), B at (4, 4), C at (6, 1), and D at (1, 5). The green dot marks the origin (0, 0) where both axes meet.

Look at point A. Start at the origin and count 2 spaces to the right along the x-axis. Then count 2 spaces up. That is how you land on (2, 2). Now look at point D. Start at the origin, go 1 space to the right, then 5 spaces up to reach (1, 5). The first number always tells you the sideways distance, and the second number tells you the up distance.

SECTION 4

The Rule for Reading Coordinates

Reading coordinates follows a simple rule that never changes. You always write the x-coordinate first and the y-coordinate second. That is why they are called an ordered pair — the order matters!

ORDERED PAIR FORMAT
(x, y)
x = how many spaces right from the origin (along the horizontal axis). y = how many spaces up from the origin (along the vertical axis).

Here is a helpful memory trick: think of the phrase "run before you jump." You run sideways first (that is x), and then you jump up (that is y). Another way to remember is that x comes before y in the alphabet, so the x number comes first in the pair.

READING A POINT — 3 STEPS
Start at (0, 0) → Count right → Count up → Write (x, y)
Step 1: Put your finger on the origin. Step 2: Slide right along the x-axis until you are directly below the point. Step 3: Slide up until you reach the point. The two numbers you counted are your coordinates!
⚠️ Watch Out!
The point (3, 5) and the point (5, 3) are not the same! Switching the numbers changes the location. The point (3, 5) means go 3 right and 5 up. The point (5, 3) means go 5 right and 3 up. They land in completely different spots.
SECTION 5

Special Points to Know

Some points on the coordinate plane are special because they sit on the axes. Let's look at how to spot them and what their coordinates look like.

Special Points: On the Axes vs. Off the Axes01234567012345E (3, 0)On the x-axisF (0, 3)On the y-axisG (4, 3)Off both axes(0, 0)
This diagram shows four types of locations. The origin (0, 0) is where the axes cross. Point E (3, 0) sits on the x-axis — its y-coordinate is 0. Point F (0, 3) sits on the y-axis — its x-coordinate is 0. Point G (4, 3) is off both axes, with dashed lines showing how you count right 4 and up 3.
Types of points on a coordinate plane
Type of PointWhat It Looks LikeExample
On the x-axisThe y-coordinate is 0(3, 0), (5, 0), (7, 0)
On the y-axisThe x-coordinate is 0(0, 2), (0, 4), (0, 6)
At the originBoth coordinates are 0(0, 0)
Off both axesBoth coordinates are greater than 0(2, 5), (4, 3), (6, 1)
SECTION 6

Step-by-Step Worked Example

Let's walk through an example together. Imagine a point is plotted on a grid. We need to find its coordinates.

Finding the Coordinates of Point P

Step 1 — Start at the Origin

Place your finger on the origin (0, 0). This is always where you begin. The origin is the corner where the x-axis and y-axis meet.

Step 2 — Count Spaces to the Right (Find x)

Slide your finger to the right along the x-axis. Count each grid line you pass. Suppose you count 5 spaces before you are directly below point P. That means the x-coordinate is 5.
x = 5

Step 3 — Count Spaces Up (Find y)

Now slide your finger straight up from where you stopped. Count each grid line as you go up. Suppose you count 3 spaces until you land on point P. That means the y-coordinate is 3.
y = 3

Step 4 — Write the Ordered Pair

Put the x-coordinate first and the y-coordinate second, separated by a comma, inside parentheses.
Point P = (5, 3)
💡 Quick Tip
If you ever mix up x and y, remember: x goes across (like a person crossing the street), and y goes high (like reaching to the sky). Across, then sky — x, then y!
SECTION 7

Common Mistakes and How to Avoid Them

Even smart students sometimes make small errors with coordinates. Here are the most common mistakes and how to fix them.

Common coordinate mistakes and fixes
MistakeWhat HappensHow to Fix It
Switching x and yWriting (3, 5) when the point is really at (5, 3). You end up at the wrong spot!Always go right first (x), then up (y). Remember: across the hall, then up the stairs.
Starting from the wrong placeCounting from a point that is not the origin. Your numbers will be off.Always start from the origin (0, 0) at the bottom-left corner where the axes cross.
Counting the grid lines wrongCounting the spaces between lines instead of the lines themselves, or miscounting by one.Point carefully to each line and count out loud. Use your finger or a pencil to keep track.
Forgetting the parentheses or commaWriting 3 5 instead of (3, 5). This can be confusing and may be marked wrong on a test.Always use the format (x, y) with parentheses around both numbers and a comma in between.
✦ KEY TAKEAWAY
Think of reading coordinates like giving someone directions to your desk in a classroom. You would say "go to the 4th column, 2nd row" — not "2nd row, 4th column." The order matters because switching the numbers sends someone to a different desk!
SECTION 8

Looking Ahead: Where Coordinates Lead

Right now, you are learning to read coordinates — finding the ordered pair for a point that is already on the grid. As you grow as a math student, you will learn even more cool things with coordinates.

Your coordinate skills will keep growing!
What You Know NowWhat You'll Learn Later
Reading one point on a gridPlotting your own points on a grid from an ordered pair
Using only positive numbers (right and up)Using negative numbers to go left and down on a four-part grid
Naming individual pointsConnecting points to draw lines and shapes on the coordinate plane
Whole number coordinates like (2, 5)Fraction and decimal coordinates like (2.5, 3.5)

On the ISEE test, you will mostly be asked to identify coordinates of points on a grid with whole numbers. Mastering the basics now will make future math much easier. Every time you play a video game with a map, use GPS, or even plan where to sit with friends, you are using coordinates!

SECTION 9

Practice Problems

Now it's your turn! Try these five problems. Start with the easier ones and work your way up. Remember to always go right first (x), then up (y).

PROBLEM 1 — CONCEPTUAL
In the ordered pair (4, 7), which number is the x-coordinate and which is the y-coordinate?
PROBLEM 2 — BASIC CALCULATION
A point is located 3 spaces to the right of the origin and 6 spaces up from the origin. What are its coordinates?
PROBLEM 3 — INTERMEDIATE
Point M is at (2, 5) and Point N is at (5, 2). Are these the same point? Explain why or why not.
PROBLEM 4 — APPLIED
On a treasure map grid, the treasure is buried at the point that is 7 spaces east (right) and 4 spaces north (up) from the starting flag. A second treasure is at a point that is directly on the eastern path (x-axis) at 6 spaces east. Write the coordinates for both treasures.
PROBLEM 5 — CRITICAL THINKING
Samara says that any point whose two coordinates are equal, like (3, 3) or (5, 5), will always fall on a straight line from the origin that goes into the grid at an angle. Is she right? Why do you think this happens?
SUMMARY

Lesson Summary

A coordinate plane is made from two number lines: the x-axis (horizontal) and the y-axis (vertical). They meet at the origin (0, 0). To read the coordinates of any point, start at the origin, count spaces to the right for the x-coordinate, then count spaces up for the y-coordinate. Write your answer as an ordered pair (x, y).

Remember that order matters — (3, 5) and (5, 3) are different points! Points on the x-axis have a y-coordinate of 0, and points on the y-axis have an x-coordinate of 0. Always use the trick "run before you jump" — go across first, then up. With practice, reading coordinates will feel as easy as reading your name!

Varsity Tutors • ISEE Lower Level: Mathematics Achievement • Reading Coordinates — Identify coordinates of a point on a grid.