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Positive & Negative Integers, Compare and Order: KS3 Teaching for Mastery
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Positive & Negative Integers, Compare and Order: KS3 Teaching for Mastery

(1)
The second lesson in the series of: “1. order positive and negative integers, decimals and fractions; use the symbols =, ≠, <, >, ≤, ≥”, taken from the DfE GCSE content and assessment objectives/ Numbers/ Structure and Calculation. A comprehensive maths mastery lesson where KS3 children must apply their understanding of inequality symbols to compare and order positive and negative integers. This lesson helps students to recognise the value of positive and negative integers through use of the number line. An ideal use may be for teachers of year 7 to assess prior knowledge and build upon their understanding and application of simple arithmetic calculations and negative numbers or as a follow on lesson from lesson one in this series which can be found in my resources. Download this Powerpoint and add your school logo. . Prerequisites (taken from the national curriculum)… Read, write, order and compare numbers up to 10 million and determine the value of each digit Use negative numbers in context, and calculate intervals across 0 Understand the meaning of integer and apply it to solve maths problems (not NC) . Lesson criteria… Apply equality and inequality symbols in contexts involving negative integers Appreciate and apply that a negative number with a greater magnitude is less than a negative number of smaller magnitude e.g. -10<-2 . NEXT LESSON… Follow on with the next lesson in this series, ‘Compare and Order Fractions and Decimals’ in my resources. . Using principles of teaching for mastery…, this lesson uses the Do It, Twist It, Deepen It structure, to secure, challenge and deepen children’s understanding. Much thought has been given to the question choice and structure of the lesson. Prerequisites are used alongside the Teacher, Together, On My Own structure, to scaffold and model new concepts. Questions are chosen based on small incremental changes to difficulty and to encourage connections. . Ben Williams MathemaTips
Decimals and Fractions, Compare & Order : KS3 Teaching for Mastery
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Decimals and Fractions, Compare & Order : KS3 Teaching for Mastery

(0)
The third lesson in the series of: “1. order positive and negative integers, decimals and fractions; use the symbols =, ≠, <, >, ≤, ≥”, taken from the DfE GCSE content and assessment objectives/ Numbers/ Structure and Calculation. A comprehensive maths mastery lesson where KS3 children must apply their understanding of equal and inequality symbols to compare and order decimals and fractions. An ideal use may be for teachers of year 7 to assess prior knowledge and build upon their understanding of ordering decimals and ordering fractions to make comparisons between a mix of decimals and fractions less than one. This lesson follows on from lesson two in this series which can be found in my resources. Download this Powerpoint and add your school logo. . Prerequisites (taken from the national curriculum)… Read and write decimal numbers as fractions (for example, 0.71 = 71/100) Read, write, order and compare numbers with up to 3 decimal places Compare and order fractions, including fractions > 1 Associate a fraction with division and calculate decimal fraction equivalents (for example, 0.375) for a simple fraction (for example, 3/8) Identify the value of each digit in numbers given to 3 decimal places Recall and use equivalences between simple fractions, decimals and percentages, including in different contexts . Lesson criteria… Make comparisons between decimals and fractions using equal to or inequality symbols Order decimals and fractions using equal to or inequality symbols . NEXT LESSON… Follow on with the next lesson in this series, ‘Compare and Order Fractions and Decimals > 1’ in my resources. . Using principles of teaching for mastery…, this lesson uses the Do It, Twist It, Deepen It structure, to secure, challenge and deepen children’s understanding. Much thought has been given to the question choice and structure of the lesson. Prerequisites are used alongside the Teacher, Together, On My Own structure, to scaffold and model new concepts. Questions are chosen based on small incremental changes to difficulty and to encourage connections. . Ben Williams MathemaTips
Positive & Negative Integers: KS3 Teaching for Mastery
b_ingli_williamsb_ingli_williams

Positive & Negative Integers: KS3 Teaching for Mastery

(3)
The first lesson in the series of: “1. order positive and negative integers, decimals and fractions; use the symbols =, ≠, <, >, ≤, ≥”, taken from the DfE GCSE content and assessment objectives/ Numbers/ Structure and Calculation. A comprehensive maths mastery lesson introducing KS3 students to the word ‘integer’. This lesson helps students to recognise integers including positive and negative integers and apply this to familiar and unfamiliar contexts. An ideal use may be for teachers of year 7 to assess prior knowledge and build upon their understanding and application of simple arithmetic calculations, negative numbers and greater than and less than (inequality) symbols, alongside the key learning objective (WALT), “Understand the meaning of the word ‘integer’”. Download this Powerpoint and add your school logo. . Prerequisites (taken from the national curriculum)… Read, write, order and compare numbers up to 10 million and determine the value of each digit Use negative numbers in context, and calculate intervals across 0 . Lesson criteria… Understand what an integer is Identify a +ive or -ive integer (sub) Understand the difference between whole numbers and integers (sub) Review relevant knowledge for upcoming lessons (counting through 0, application and ordering of negatives, decimals or fractions) . NEXT LESSON… Follow on with the next lesson in this series, ‘Compare and Order Positive and Negative Integers’ in my resources. . Using principles of teaching for mastery…, this lesson uses the Do It, Twist It, Deepen It structure, to secure, challenge and deepen children’s understanding. Much thought has been given to the question choice and structure of the lesson. Prerequisites are used alongside the Teacher, Together, On My Own structure, to scaffold and model new concepts. Questions are chosen based on small incremental changes to difficulty and to encourage connections.