Students will be able to communicate mathematical ideas using highly familiar contexts in everyday language and mathematical notation. These requirements are clearly outlined in the elements of each learning outcome. Students must be observed to demonstrate achievement on more than one occasion and in different contexts to make sure the assessment is consistent, reliable, fair and equitable.
Teachers should use a variety of learning activities and assessment tasks that provide a range of opportunities for students to demonstrate each learning outcome.
A range of evidence can be used to demonstrate that a student has achieved the learning outcomes. This includes, but is not limited to, direct observation, written work, oral presentations, object production and project implementation. That player is then the winner.
Doing some hands on maths activities with your child is a great way to capture their full attention when you are doing maths at home, and these games have been created to do just that. Step 1: The first person picks a card containing five statements.
Each of the five statements provide a clue to the final answer, starting with a vague clue for the first statement, through to an easy clue for the fifth statement. Step 2: Player one picks a card and reads out the first statement. Step 3: Player two can choose to give an answer and score the maximum five points, if they are correct, but risk scoring zero if they are wrong. Alternatively, they can choose to hear the four point question. They keep on going until they get a question wrong, or they choose to pass to hear the next question until they get to the final one point question.
This is a very simple game that will help your child practice their arithmetic skills, and it is a game they can play with a group of friends. Step 1: Each player picks 4 number cards at random from the pile. Step 3: If nobody is able to reach 24, you can make it closest wins! Step 1: The first player picks a card numbered from 2 — 9.
Step 2: They then collect another 4 cards with the same number as the first, so they have 5 cards with the same number. Step 3: The aim of the game is to use one or more of the five cards to get an answer of each digit between one and ten.
If for example, the player chose a 5. Whether you realise it or not, the great outdoors and maths go hand in hand, and these outdoor maths games and activities should serve as inspiration about how you can help your child learn maths while outdoors!
Board games are a fun way to spend time with the family, but have you ever thought about actually becoming part of the board game? To help your child learn maths outside, you can easily make a life size board game and become the characters in the game. Step 2: The board games you play can vary depending on the age of your child. With younger children, the plates can be numbered to encourage counting or learning their number bonds, whilst older kids could have times tables or other maths facts to answer as they go round the board.
Everyone knows how to play hopscotch, but by introducing maths into the mix you can take this traditional playground game to the next level. Step 1: Using chalk, draw out hopscotch squares on the ground and in each square, write either multiples of a number or multiplication facts. Step 2: Each person then hop, skips and counts at the same time, which is a really good way of helping those multiplication tables stick.
The other great thing about this game is this can be done with one person, or if friends are visiting everyone can join in and have a go.
Time is one of those things many children find tricky, but this game will help your child tackle this topic. Step 1: Try drawing a clock on the ground with chalk. Step 2: Then, get your child to use their body to make the hands of the clock.
They could show just the hour or minute hands by lying straight, or they could use their body to make the hour and the minute hands, with their legs the longer part being the minute hand and their torso the shorter part the hour hand.
Whilst some classroom resources may be a little hard to come by at home, most family homes have a dice or two lying around. With most board games coming prepackaged with a dice, dig them out of the cupboard and re-purpose them for these fun maths dice games.
Try to get your opposite sides adding up to 7 as on the real thing. Step 1: Write the word skunk and separate each letter into a different column on a sheet of paper. Step 2: The first player rolls a pair of dice and works out the total of the two dice. The score is written in the S column.
If they roll a one they score zero. Step 4: If they roll a one in the second round, play stops and the player takes the score from the first round as their total for the game. The risk a player takes in moving on and throwing again, is if two ones are thrown, all the points for the game are wiped and the player scores zero.
This game is similar to the skunk game, but there only needs to be one player and one dice. However, even with only one dice things will still get tense! Step 1: Throw the die and the player records the number that they roll. If a one is thrown at any point, the player loses all the points scored so far. Step 3: The first player to score is the winner. Step 1: Draw out a triangle made from squares, with four on the bottom up to one at the top.
Step 2: Each player chooses 10 number from the products table 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 8, 9, 10, 12, 15, 16, 18, 20, 24, 25, 30, This is simply all of the possible options you can get when multiplying the numbers between 1 and 6 together. The upside down calculator and birthday task especially!!!!
This is a great activity to do as a revision lesson to engage your students in some exam practice. It'll also help you to identify weaker areas that need more revision.
A set of revision starters covering all strands of the GCSE. There are 3 slides to use over 3 lessons to develop the same topic. Ideal for GCSE revision, this is one of a collection of worksheets which contain exam-type questions that gradually increase in difficulty. These review sheets are great to use in class or as a homework. They are also excellent for one-to-one tuition and for interventions.
For similar-style re Higher: non-calculator paper games. A quick revision of 9 topics either for a starter or a plenary in the build up to exams. A fun game to enthuse and engage in the run up to the exams.
I hope they re useful!! We have not included questions that require a written method of calculation. There are hundreds of potential questions. Ideal for assessing gaps and progress. Toggle navigation. Birds v Robots - Maths Battle?
Use the arrow keys to move Tommy. The ctrl key makes him jump and the up arrow selects a number. Tommy's Trek - Times Tables? Caterpillar Carnage? Answer the maths questions and then collect as much candy as you can for Angry Andy. Angry Andy Must Have Candy? Stone Age Stu - Addition? Answer the maths questions and then see how many opponents you can defeat in a snowball fight. Snowball Smash? Maths Climber? Monkey Maths? Subtraction - Mini Maths Golf? Super Maths Bowling - Multiplication?
Break into the tomb using your multiplication skills. Multiplication Tile Crash? Help Marlon defeat the evil beasts with your multiplication knowledge. Marlon's Magical Maths Mission - Multiplication? Use your maths skills to earn time in the game and see how many ducks you can shoot. Maths Fairground Shoot? Parachute Number Line?
Multiplication Miner? Archery Arithmetic - Multiplication? This new version will work on any tablet or computer. Telling the Time? KS2 Maths Invaders? Updated December - this is a new version that will work on a tablet or computer. Sorting 2D shapes on a Venn diagram?
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