I am a specialist Primary Maths teacher in a large teaching school. I have several decades of teaching experience and enjoy creating high-quality resources. I try to incorporate a strong visual element into my presentations and worksheets. Thank you for your interest in my resources. I do hope you find them useful.
I am a specialist Primary Maths teacher in a large teaching school. I have several decades of teaching experience and enjoy creating high-quality resources. I try to incorporate a strong visual element into my presentations and worksheets. Thank you for your interest in my resources. I do hope you find them useful.
This is Powerpoint presentation which is designed to show how bar modelling can be used to solve mathematical problems. It has been used successfully in upper KS2 and lower KS3. I have also used it in an INSET in order to develop a pictorial approach to mathematical problem solving and the bar model method in particular
This is a PowerPoint presentation which focuses on the relationship between area and perimeter of 2D shapes. Firstly some rectangles are shown and pupils have to work out the area and perimeters of each. The presentation then progresses to looking at irregular shapes and examining the largest and smallest possible perimeters for a given area.
The presentation finishes by posing the pupils two challenges which require squared paper. Namely for firstly rectangular and then irregular shapes, can they different shapes of a specified area and then investigate the largest and smallest possible perimeter for each.
Thank you for your interest in my maths resources. I do hope you find them useful.
This is a set of four activity sheets designed to familairise pupils visually with the concept of percentage meaning “out of 100”. The first sheet asks children to colour different percentages of a 100 grid and identify the percentage uncoloured.
The next three sheets presents children with various sized grids and asks them to colour different percentages of that grid. The percentages represented are 50%, 25% and 10%.
They then have to write a percentage fact to represent each colored grid.
The activity sheets are in pdf format and also Microsoft Publisher to allow for easy formating and customisation.
Thank you for your interest in my resources. I do hope you find them useful.
This is a “Maths on the Move” activity. it comprises of twenty A5 cards which can be placed around a classroom or even better the playground. Each card contains an arithmetic question. The questions are based on the Year Six SATs arithmetic paper. THey are supplied in pdf and also Publisher format so can be easily edited if required. Each child (or pair) has a copy of the supplied answer sheet and have to find the cards before answering the question. The teacher has a sheet with all the questions and answers so can check each answer as the children find them.
This is a great activity for keeping children active as well as learning maths. I have used it very successfully either as a pre-SATs revision session or after SATs to use some of their newly acquired maths skills!
I hope you find this activity useful and fun! Thanks for your interest in my maths resources. Feedback is greatly appreciated.
This is an animated Powerpoint presentation which is designed for Year Six preparing for SATS. It offers simple clear animated reminders of most of the calculation methods they are likely to need on the arithmetic paper (Paper 1).
Calculation methods featured on the presentation include:
Adding and subtracting fractions with different denominators. The crossbow method is featured which I usually find children find the simplest to remember.
Multiplying a pair of fractions together.
Multiplying fractions by a whole number.
Dividing fractions by a whole number.
Multiplication and division of mixed numbers by a whole number, turning the mixed number into an improper fraction first.
Thank you for your interest in my maths resources. I do hope you find them useful.
This is a two page worksheet which focuses on finding percentage of an amount. It uses the "Percentage bubble" method where pupils have to find 50%, 25%, 10% and 1%. They can then use these facts by combining them to find any percentage up to 100%. I have used this successfully with upper KS2 children. The second sheet allows children to select their own starting number to represent 100% and then find a variety of other percentages.
This is a PowerPoint presentation on a theme of adding fractions which I have used with Year 5 and Year 6 pupils. It start by adding fractions with the same denominator, demonstrating that this is a very simple process. It then goes on to look at adding fractions with different denominators showing how they need first to be converted into the same denominator. Several visual example are given.
This is a stand-alone maths investigation which is great for developing skills in adding several small numbers.
Each letter of the alphabet stands for a different number. A=1, B=2, C=3, and so on.
The investigation gives children various challenges. These include working which animal scores the most points; also whose name in the class scores the most/least points.
Can children find a word that scores exactly 100? (ELEPHANTS!)
Great fun! I have used this many times and children always really enjoy the challenge.
This is a worksheet which focuses on Roman Numerals. It asks pupils to convert between Roman and English numbers. There are also additional tasks such as writing out a times table and answering a series of questions using Roman numerals (e.g. In which year were you born)?
This worksheet is suitable for upper KS2 and would be useful for Year 5 children who need a knowledge of Roman Numerals for SATs.
Thank you for your interest in my Maths resources. I do hope you find them useful
Andrew
a really useful starter activity for upper KS2 or lower KS3. Children are given a number and have to devise different questions the answer to which is that number. They are encouraged to use a variety of different areas of maths
This is a simple times table matrix activity. Children have to fill in the yellow part first (up to 10 x 10)
They can then use these fact to complete the yellow part (up to 12 x 12).
I usually put a timer on the whiteboard. The children record their time each week and try to improve.
There is also an algebra puzzle on the sheet for early finishers.
This is a set of 12 colourful Maths mastery challenge cards designed to provide Year 5 or Six pupils with opportunities to develop their reasoning skills. I give the children a set each and ask them to stick them in their books. Alongside each card, they have to workout an answer but then explain their reasoning. They can be used successfully for developing mathematical discussion.
This is another set of Math Mastery Challenge Cards. I have used these successfully with Year 5 and Year 6 children. They are useful for SATs revision, particularly in developing children's reasoning.
There are 8 challenge cards in this set. Each card gives children a problem to solve and asks them to explain or justify their answer.
These could be used as an additional challenge or as a whole lesson. I have given children the whole set and asked them to select one card. They then stick the card in their maths book and then write their solution next to it, explaining their reasoning. The children loved the activity!
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This is a clear and informative Powerpoint which explains and demonstrates transformation of 2D shapes on a coordinate grid in four quadrants.
I created it for my Year 6 Maths class. The shapes move across the grid when they are translated
There are 12 slides each with examples. There is also a SATs type question as a plenary
This is a set of 10 worksheets or "Daily check-ups" in pdf format. Each consists of 5 questions. The first four questions have been designed to reinforce fluency in the numbers skills required for end-of-Key-Stage tests for Year 6. The fifth question represents a longer "mathematical reasoning" SATs style question. I use these worksheets as a starter activity in daily maths lesson in the run up to SATs. They could equally be used for homework tasks.
Topics covered include place value, negative numbers, BODMAS, fractions, number sequences, percentages various calculations and inverse operations.
Thank you for your interest. I hope you find them useful.
This is a two page worksheet in Word format. It focuses on number patterns and sequences. The children are given several number sequences and have to identify the rule of each sequence as well as giving the next two terms. There are also several SAT's style questions for reinforcement.
This would be ideal for Year six pupils as part of a unit on algebra or as preparation for end-of-Key Stage tests.
This is two page worksheet which looks at reflective symmetry. The first sections asks children to reflect 2D shapes in the "x" axis and also the "y" axis. They then have to draw their own shape before carrying out a reflection. The reflections are performed on a coordinate grid in four quadrants.
On the second page, children are given a variety of 2D shapes. and asked to use a mirror to identify and draw lines of symmetry.
This would be useful as part of preparation for SATs or more generally for upper KS2 work on translations.
This is a resource we use every day in our maths lessons. It is a editable template which can be linked to the schools calculation policy. Children are given four calculation questions at the start of the lesson. These can obviously vary. It could be four of the same type of calculation or four different.
There is also a Countdown-type puzzle to finish.
We have found these invaluable for raising standards of arithmetic.
It is supplied in Powerpoint format to be readily editable.
Thank you for your interest in my maths resources. I hope you find them useful.
This is a three page resource with different activities relating to percentages. The first reinforces the concept of percentages and asks pupils to look at coloured dots on a hundred square and identify the percentage of each colour.
The rest of the activities focus on the concept of increasing and decreasing quantities. Coloured cubes are used and pupils are asked to increase and decrease them by given percentages and work out the totals.
Children could be given coloured cubes to help them visualise the percentages.
Thank you for your interest in my maths resources. I hope you find them useful.
There are two worksheets here which ask the pupils to firstly draw and then interpret line graphs. In both cases, data is given in the form of a table. The first worksheet gives pupils a template with axes drawn, and space for labels for each axis. The second worksheet asks pupils to draw their own without scaffolding. Pupils are asked to use their line graphs to devise their own questions to share with a friend.
The resource is supplied in both pdf and Publisher format for easy editing and customization.
Thank you for your interest in my resources. I hope you find them useful.