I am a KS2 teacher, Primary Maths Specialist, mum of two and music lover! Lots of maths resources with a sprinkling of English and music planning and display resources. Thank you for looking at my resources; I hope that they help you in some small way to take back the weekend!
I am a KS2 teacher, Primary Maths Specialist, mum of two and music lover! Lots of maths resources with a sprinkling of English and music planning and display resources. Thank you for looking at my resources; I hope that they help you in some small way to take back the weekend!
Ready to go activities that I have used throughout the year with my Y6 pupils and collated onto one power-point. Ideal for starter activities, morning-task, early finishers’ task, mental maths sessions, revision, homework or even display.
The resource is comprised of 16 activities and the mathematical ideas covered include:
- Averages: mean, mode, median and range.
- Interpreting graphs, tables and pie-charts.
- Probability.
I have also included some pictures that may be helpful if you would like to take the mean exploration further.
I have found these particularly useful for my Y6 pupils to keep refreshing them on this area of maths, but I think that they could also be used in Y5. There is a mixture of closed-questions, open-ended investigations and mysteries.
A ready to go resource with six activities based on algebra. Perfect for starter activities, homework, extension task for early finishers or morning task. Although I have labelled this as a starter, several of the activities could easily keep pupils busy for a whole lesson - particularly finding the 10th, 100th and nth term of sequences and the ‘Always, sometimes never’ activity based on four different expressions.
Mathematical ideas covered include substituting numbers into algebraic expressions and finding the nth term of sequences.
Some of the activities are closed questions, but most require pupils to investigate and use the higher level skills of reasoning and justification. I used this activities with my Year 6 pupils as various points of the year and have collated them on one PowerPoint for ease. I would say they are suitable for able Y6s and could also be used in Key Stage 3.
Baseline assessments for:
Number and Algebra - Level 6.
Shape /Geometry - Level 5 and Level 6.
Number and Calculation - Year 5 & 6.
Ideal to identify gaps at the start of a unit and progress at the end of a unit. Also work well as homework tasks.
This was a PowerPoint presentation and handout that I put together for a staff meeting in my role as subject-leader.
It introduces ideas from the Mathematics Specialist Teacher programme and aims to develop mathematical reasoning. It discusses the importance of reasoning, outlines the mathematical skills required to develop reasoning and provides ideas for activities to develop reasoning.
The activities can be adapted to suit any age group and any mathematical concept. Many of the activities could also be adapted across the curriculum. They are self-differentiating, with a low entry point and high ceiling and are very quick and easy to set up. The activities are a great option for lesson starters, mental maths activities or time-fillers. The notes under each slide provide an explanation of the activity and some ideas on how it could be adapted.
The handout is provided in both PDF and Microsoft Word format.
Ideal for starter activities, stolen moments, morning task , finisher’s activities or mental maths lessons. These are all ready to go activities that have a low entry point and high ceiling, making them self-differentiating and accessible to pupils across KS2. Each activity is designed to develop pupil’s reasoning skills and make rich connections across mathematical ideas.
The activities range from 5 minute fillers to investigations that can be extended to span a whole lesson. There are 37 activities, but these can be very quickly and easily adapted to provide hundreds of activities.
These are all activities that I have done with my pupils throughout the year; I have simply collated them onto one Powerpoint.
Each slide includes explanation beneath and ideas to support/extend learning.
Thank you for looking.
Ready-to-go ideas for developing pupils’ ability to add and subtract mentally and to reason about number. These activities link strongly with the CPA (concrete, pictorial, abstract) approach to teaching maths.
I created these activities for a research project I was conducting in school as part of my Maths Specialist Teacher qualification. They are all aimed at improving children’s mental addition and subtraction by developing a broad range of strategies and encouraging them to reason about number. We had found that children were entering KS2 with only a handful of (often cumbersome) mental strategies, e.g. partitioning into tens and units, using number bonds to ten only or counting on/back in ones, and weren’t always applying them appropriately. We used the activities with Y3 and Y4 children, but it can be used from Y2 upwards as it links very strongly with the Y2 curriculum.
The resource includes differentiated activities with written descriptions and accompanying interactive whiteboard slides and paper resources where applicable. Slides were originally in SMARTboard format and this is perhaps the best software to use if you have it as the slides can be interacted with this way; however, I have also copied the slides over to a PowerPoint presentation for those without SMARTboard software. Also included is a wall display, which shows visual representations of different strategies for mental addition and subtraction. The activities can be adapted for all year groups and abilities and you will find a lot more mileage in this resource once you get started and the impact on the classes studied in terms of both their confidence and ability in mental maths was phenomenal.
National Curriculum Links
Pupils should partition numbers in different ways (for example, 23 = 20 + 3 and 23 = 10 + 13) to support subtraction.
Recall and use addition and subtraction facts to 20 fluently, and derive and use related facts up to 100
Add and subtract numbers using concrete objects, pictorial representations, and mentally, including: a two-digit number and ones; a two-digit number and tens; two two-digit numbers; adding three one-digit numbers.
Show that addition of two numbers can be done in any order (commutative) and subtraction of one number from another cannot
Recognise and use the inverse relationship between addition and subtraction and use this to check calculations and solve missing number problems.
Pupils practise addition and subtraction to 20 to become increasingly fluent in deriving facts such as using 3 + 7 = 10; 10 – 7 = 3 and 7 = 10 – 3 to calculate 30 + 70 = 100; 100 – 70 = 30 and 70 = 100 – 30. They check their calculations, including by adding to check subtraction and adding numbers in a different order to check addition (for example, 5 + 2 + 1 = 1 + 5 + 2 = 1 + 2 + 5). This establishes commutativity and associativity of addition.
A whopping 69 ready to go activities - many of which can be easily adapted to use again. All of the activities are based on the number aspect of maths and have been tried and tested with my own class.
There are a mixed or closed questions, mysteries, open-ended investigations, quick quizzes and worded problems. These are ideal for starter or mental maths activities - great for revision. Some of the more open-ended activities ended up spanning a whole lesson with my class as they took them off in different directions and made links with other areas of mathematics.
I used them with Y6 but they could also be suitable for Y5 pupils.
Mathematical ideas covered include:
- Calculation with all four operations (mental and written methods).
- Negative numbers.
- Problems involving inverses.
- Properties of number: factors, primes, square numbers, multiples, product, odd, even.
- Place value - including decimals and rounding.
This is a set of 37 ready-to -go activities based on fractions, percentages, ratio and proportion that should save you lots of time.
I have collated these from lessons that I have taught throughout the years - so they are all tried and tested with Y6 (and some Y4 pupils). Ideal for starter activities, morning task, homework, extending pupils, tasks for early finishers, mental maths lessons, revision and baseline assessments.
I have described them as starter activities, but you will perhaps find that many of the activities can keep pupils busy for a whole lesson.
The mathematical ideas covered include:
- Calculating % of amounts.
- Equivalence between fractions, decimals and percentages.
- Calculating fractions of amounts.
- Solving worded problems involving fractions, percentages, ratio and proportion.
Activities include closed-questions, quick- quizzes, open-ended investigations, ‘Always, sometimes, never?’, scaling up recipes and worded problems.
I really hope that you find this resource useful.
I am passionate about developing pupils ability to reason mathematically and - as the current National Curriculum states - make rich connections across mathematical ideas.
The bundle features:
PowerPoint that can be used for staff CPD to encourage them to create opportunities to develop reasoning in their maths lessons.
PowerPoint of ‘Always, sometime, never?’ investigations. Where children have to reason and justify their decisions with evidence.
PowerPoint of ready-to-go reasoning activities. These are all open-ended activities that have a low entry and high ceiling - suitable for across KS2, but especially useful in Years 5 & 6.
A ready-to-go quick reasoning activity to use on a maths display or in the staffroom.
There are hours worth of activities here that prioritise reasoning but will touch on all areas of the mathematics curriculum.
All the starter or morning task activities that you will need for a year! Covering all of the areas of maths, these PowerPoints have an array of activities that have been tried and tested with Year 6 pupils but would work throughout Upper KS2 and even KS3. There are quick-quizzes and closed questions - perfect for baselines and revision, but also loads of open-ended investigations and mysteries that will encourage pupils to reason and cerate rich links between different areas of mathematics (one of the founding principles of the new National Curriculum). Really quick and easy to use and enjoyable for teacher and pupils. Ideal for starter activities, morning task, extensions, tasks for early finishers, homework, baseline assessments and group work.