1. Menu Maths
Teachers can make this task accessible by asking students to design objects that satisfy only one or two constraints, but can easily add challenge by asking students to satisfy more constraints. Students can also be asked to analyse which constraints pair well together and which cannot pair together.
Here are a couple of examples:
2. Rehearsal Strips
3. Eedi
Diagnostic Questions have always been brilliant for identifying and understanding misconceptions, so it’s fantastic to see them supplemented with all these extra teaching resources.
4. A Level Knowledge Organisers
5. Fraction Bar
MathsPad has shared a free Interactive Fraction Bar Tool for finding fractions of an amount. The tool enables you to switch fraction families with the same amount, so for example, if you have already found a third of the amount, you can demonstrate how to use this to find a sixth. You can also start with different fractions, use different units (money and metric units) and extend the bar to show fractions greater than one whole.
Tickets are selling fast for Marvellous Maths 3 – a full day of top quality maths CPD, presented by Craig Barton and myself. We are going on tour with this course: on 18th October we’ll be at my lovely school in Sutton, South London. Then on 19th October we’ll be at Worcester Racecourse, and on 20th October we’ll be in Craig’s hometown of Bolton at the Science and Technology Centre. It will be wonderful to be in a room full of maths teachers three days in a row! Book now at mathscpd.weebly.com.
AQA Webinar
Calculators
There’s a lot of negativity about Casio’s new calculator model, but we do need to learn how to use it now that the old model has been discontinued. Thank you to my colleague Morgan for providing me with an excellent poster for my classroom wall.
Check out Casio’s upcoming calculator webinars, and recent blog posts on calculators from @cclay8.
Update
Here are some things you might have missed:
- @MissNorledge has created a searchable database of all Edexcel GCSE maths past paper questions (June 2017+). It’s very quick and easy access to GCSE questions by topic, including mark schemes. Just type in a topic name and it takes you straight to the relevant page!
- Festival of the Spoken Nerd are performing An Evening of Unnecessary Detail in London in October and November, with the events being live streamed for those unable to attend in person. I’ve seen a couple of Festival of the Spoken Nerd performances in the past and hugely recommend them to maths teachers!
- Chris Smith’s excellent weekly maths newsletter is back – if you want to subscribe, email Chris at aap03102@gmail.com.
- In time for the new school year, the creators of my favourite game Nerdle (which I have played for 545 days in a row!) have launched ‘Super Nerdle’. This allows teachers to customise Nerdle games for their students.
- The annual Big MathsJam takes place on 11 – 12 November. It’s a weekend of recreational mathematics, with cool people and interesting maths!
- I thought some teachers might like to see my updated posters which I made on Canva. I blogged about these initiatives last year. The main difference this year is that we’ve changed the name ‘Maths Clinic’ to ‘Maths Extra’ in response to an idea from a local Head of Maths who suggested that students might not respond well to the term clinic.
Finally, thank you to James Greenland for sending me a lovely book of Additional Mathematics O Level Papers from 1968 – 1971. I’ve shared an example below. I like it that students had some choice over which questions they answered. Here I’ve just shared the pure sections: there were mechanics and statistics sections in the exam too.
View the original article and our Inspiration here