Universal Sets, Complement Sets, and Subsets
1 / 22

P6 Mathematics - Term I

Topic 1: Sets

Lesson 2: Universal Sets, Complement Sets, and Subsets

Duration: 45 minutes

Learning Objectives

By the end of this lesson, you will be able to:

  • Define and identify universal sets in given contexts
  • Define and find complement sets
  • Understand the concept of subsets
  • Form subsets from a given set
  • Explain the relationship between universal sets, complement sets, and subsets

Review: Types of Sets

From Lesson 1, we learned:

  • Equal sets (=): Same items, same number
  • Equivalent sets (~): Different items, same number
  • Unequal sets (≠): Different number of items

Today: We learn about universal sets, complements, and subsets

What is a Universal Set?

The universal set (U) is the set containing ALL items we are considering in a particular situation.

Examples:

Context: All learners in this classroom
U = {all learners in P6 classroom}

Context: All fruits in a basket
U = {oranges, mangoes, bananas, pineapples}

Symbol: We use U for universal set

Universal Set Examples

Example 1:

U = {all days of the week}
U = {Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday, Friday,
Saturday, Sunday}

Example 2:

U = {numbers from 1 to 10}
U = {1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10}

Key point: The universal set depends on the context!

Complement Sets

Definition: The complement of a set contains all elements in the universal set that are NOT in that set.

Symbol: A' (read as "A prime" or "complement of A")

Example:

U = {1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6}
A = {2, 4, 6}
A' = {1, 3, 5}  ← Items in U but NOT in A

Example: Complement Sets

Visual showing complement sets

Key relationship: A and A' together equal the universal set U

Practice: Find the Complement

U = {a, b, c, d, e, f, g, h}
A = {a, c, e, g}

Question: What is A' (complement of A)?

Think: Which elements are in U but NOT in A?

Answer: Complement

A' = {b, d, f, h}

Check:

  • A = {a, c, e, g} (4 elements)
  • A' = {b, d, f, h} (4 elements)
  • A and A' together = all 8 elements in U ✓

What is a Subset?

Definition: A set whose members are ALL contained in another set.

Symbol: ⊂ or ⊆

Example:

U = {all learners in this class}
B = {all boys in this class}

Question: Are all boys also learners? Yes!

Therefore: B ⊂ U (B is a subset of U)

Subset Examples

Visual showing subset relationship

Key point: Every element in a subset MUST be in the larger set

Example: Subsets

U = {1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10}

These are all subsets of U:

  • A = {2, 4, 6, 8, 10} ⊂ U
  • B = {1, 3, 5, 7, 9} ⊂ U
  • C = {1, 2, 3} ⊂ U
  • D = {5} ⊂ U (even one element!)
  • E = { } ⊂ U (empty set is a subset of any set)

Practice: Forming Subsets

Given: U = {a, b, c, d, e}

Form 3 different subsets from U:

Write them in your exercise book.

Examples could include:

  • {a, b}
  • {c, d, e}
  • {a}
  • { }

Special Subset Rule

Important facts:

  • A set is a subset of itself: U ⊂ U
  • The empty set { } is a subset of every set
  • If A ⊂ U, then every element of A is also in U

Connecting All Three Concepts

Visual showing relationship between U, A, and A'

Relationships:

  • U contains everything
  • A is a subset of U (A ⊂ U)
  • A' is the complement of A
  • A and A' together equal U

Practice Problem

Given: U = {1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10}
       A = {2, 4, 6, 8, 10}

Answer these:

  1. Is A a subset of U?
  2. Find A' (complement of A)
  3. Is A' also a subset of U?

Answers

  1. Yes, A ⊂ U (all elements of A are in U)

  2. A' = {1, 3, 5, 7, 9} (odd numbers)

  3. Yes, A' ⊂ U (complement is always a subset of U)

Check: A and A' together = {1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10} = U ✓

Real-Life Example

Context: Your family

U = {Father, Mother, Sister1, Sister2, Brother}
A = {female family members} = {Mother, Sister1, Sister2}
A' = {male family members} = {Father, Brother}

Notice:

  • A ⊂ U (females are family members)
  • A' ⊂ U (males are family members)
  • A and A' together = U (all family members)

Summary

Concept Symbol Meaning
Universal Set U All items in our context
Complement A' Items in U but NOT in A
Subset A ⊂ U All elements of A are in U

Key relationships:

  • A and A' together equal U
  • Both A and A' are subsets of U

Homework

  1. At home, identify a universal set (e.g., all family members, all plates)
  2. Create set A (a subset of U)
  3. Find A' (complement of A)
  4. Given U = {Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday, Friday, Saturday, Sunday}, form 4 different subsets

Expected time: 20 minutes

Next Lesson Preview

Tomorrow we will learn about:

  • Venn diagrams
  • How to draw sets visually
  • Union and intersection of sets

Venn diagrams will help us SEE the relationships we learned today!

Credits

Created: November 21, 2025
Based on: NCDC P6 Mathematics Curriculum - Topic 1: Sets

Source: National Curriculum Development Centre (NCDC), Uganda

Available from: https://ncdc.go.ug/