A set of printable cards to complete a family of four (fact family) upon.
Print these off cut them out and hand out for students to stick in their book. By using the same template each time the students will know exactly what needs to be done and get started quicker.
Write the 3 numbers of the fact family (one in each corner) and the students fill in the blanks to create the four facts.
A fact family is a group of math facts using the same numbers. In the case of addition/subtraction, you use three numbers and get four facts. For example, you can form a fact family using the three numbers 3, 4 and 7. 3+4=7, 4+3=7, 7-4=3, 7-3=4.
Students can practice using different methods of proof with this worksheet for AS/A-Level Students. This worksheet includes chance to use proof by deduction, exhaustion, contradiction and disproof by counter example.
A card sort including both exact form and to 1 decimal place. Match each circle with its accompanying area and circumference. Both radius and diameter examples included.
Practice collecting like terms using these fun bonfire night/4th of July themed colouring sheets. This pack contains three different worksheets of different levels.
Toffee Apple - Different variables with a power (exponent) of one
Rocket/Firework - Different variables with constants and variables multiplied together e.g. 3xy and 2yx = 5xy
Campfire - Different variables of different powers (exponents)
This resource consists of three different task cards, each differentiated three ways. It also includes a set of blank files to aid in creating the two-way tables.
As an extension students could also draw a dual or compound bar chart.
Please read the preview before purchasing to see if this lesson is appropriate for you.
This lesson is based on the Pearson Key Stage 3 Maths Progress scheme of work but is appropriate the curriculum over.
So the idea behind this activity is that there’s very little difference between each different worksheet but a large difference between polar opposites. Pupils answer the first 5 questions. If they get them all correct first time they move up a step, otherwise they answer the rest of the questions on that level.
The levels are:
Red - Solving one-step using balances and bar models
Orange - Solving one-step represented algebraically (positive and negative integers)
Yellow - Solving one-step represented algebraically including fractions, decimals and worded questions
Green - Solving two-step using balances and bar models with a few represented algebraically
Blue - Solving two-step represented algebraically (positive and negative integers)
Purple - Solving two-step represented algebraically including fractions and decimals
White - Solving two-step worded questions
Have students practice ordering, positive and negative integers, decimals and fractions with this FREE mystery sheet.
Students are to answer the questions to discover who stole what, when and why.
There is a higher and lower ability version.
ANSWER: The alien stole the cookie last night for fun!
16 playing cards with pairs of equivalent fractions. Used them as a memory game (turning two over at a time and seeing if they matched) but could also be used as snap or similar. First page cards, second page backing of cards if printed double sided.
This engaging class wide activity involves reading coordinates in one quadrant and being able to name very simple straight line graphs e.g. x=2 y=1.
Increasing to four quadrants and any variation of graphs. The images are moveable and on the notebook file are on an infinite cloner so move and add at leisure.
Fall Guys is a popular battle royale style game. This activity involves plotting coordinates.
This worksheet comes in 1 and 4 quadrants as well as a higher and lower details version (with and without shadow detail).
As an extension, in the game characters can have different clothes. Why not have students plot their chosen clothes and list the coordinates for someone else to draw.
Fall Guys is the intellectual property of Mediatonic, no copyright infringement intended.
7 different cards each with a question involving tree diagrams. Students have to look at both given answers and decide which is correct. There are 2 different versions, one with answers (printed on the reverse) and one without. The PowerPoint is also included to allow edits but you will require the font Juan Mikes.