Hero image

Mr Barton Maths

Average Rating4.40
(based on 3942 reviews)

Free maths resources from me, Craig Barton. I am the creator of mrbartonmaths.com & diagnosticquestions.com. I am also the TES Maths Adviser and the host of the Mr Barton Maths Podcast.

1k+Uploads

7497k+Views

3908k+Downloads

Free maths resources from me, Craig Barton. I am the creator of mrbartonmaths.com & diagnosticquestions.com. I am also the TES Maths Adviser and the host of the Mr Barton Maths Podcast.
Something in Common 22: The Shortest Race
MrBartonMathsMrBartonMaths

Something in Common 22: The Shortest Race

(0)
Earliest recommended Year group: Year 13. You have to run from tree A to tree B whilst touching a fence. Where should you touch the fence to minimise the distance you have to run? This is from the “Something in Common” collection of resources by John Burke. They allow consolidation of key skills, prevent students from copying each other (as all the questions are different), make marking and assessing easy for the teacher (as all the answers are the same!), and provide a lovely extra challenge for students as they try to figure out exactly what is going on! To access the full collection, and read John’s background notes, please visit: http://www.mrbartonmaths.com/common.htm
Something in Common 21: Leonardo of Pisa
MrBartonMathsMrBartonMaths

Something in Common 21: Leonardo of Pisa

(0)
Earliest recommended Year group: Year 10. Pupils are given the nth term of a sequence and are asked to find specific (non consecutive) terms in the sequence. It is the Fibonacci sequence. The task involves surds and indices. Then they are asked to prove that the ratio of consecutive terms tends to the golden ratio. This is from the “Something in Common” collection of resources by John Burke. They allow consolidation of key skills, prevent students from copying each other (as all the questions are different), make marking and assessing easy for the teacher (as all the answers are the same!), and provide a lovely extra challenge for students as they try to figure out exactly what is going on! To access the full collection, and read John’s background notes, please visit: http://www.mrbartonmaths.com/common.htm
Something in Common 20: Hyper Parabola
MrBartonMathsMrBartonMaths

Something in Common 20: Hyper Parabola

(0)
Earliest recommended Year group: Year 12. Pupils need to find out where a parabola and a hyperbola just touch This is from the “Something in Common” collection of resources by John Burke. They allow consolidation of key skills, prevent students from copying each other (as all the questions are different), make marking and assessing easy for the teacher (as all the answers are the same!), and provide a lovely extra challenge for students as they try to figure out exactly what is going on! To access the full collection, and read John’s background notes, please visit: http://www.mrbartonmaths.com/common.htm
Something in Common 19: Cubic, Tangent, Circle
MrBartonMathsMrBartonMaths

Something in Common 19: Cubic, Tangent, Circle

(0)
Earliest recommended Year group: Year 12. Pupils need to work out the equation of a cubic and draw a tangent at a specific place. All tangents should go through the first root. This is from the “Something in Common” collection of resources by John Burke. They allow consolidation of key skills, prevent students from copying each other (as all the questions are different), make marking and assessing easy for the teacher (as all the answers are the same!), and provide a lovely extra challenge for students as they try to figure out exactly what is going on! To access the full collection, and read John’s background notes, please visit: http://www.mrbartonmaths.com/common.htm
Something in Common 18: Polygon in Annulus
MrBartonMathsMrBartonMaths

Something in Common 18: Polygon in Annulus

(1)
Earliest recommended Year group: Year 10. Pupils need to work out the area of a couple of rings with different dimensions - but the same area. This is from the “Something in Common” collection of resources by John Burke. They allow consolidation of key skills, prevent students from copying each other (as all the questions are different), make marking and assessing easy for the teacher (as all the answers are the same!), and provide a lovely extra challenge for students as they try to figure out exactly what is going on! To access the full collection, and read John’s background notes, please visit: http://www.mrbartonmaths.com/common.htm
Something in Common 17: Multi-Simultaneous
MrBartonMathsMrBartonMaths

Something in Common 17: Multi-Simultaneous

(0)
Earliest recommended Year group: Year 10. Pupils are presented with a number of simultaneous equations to solve. How quickly will they spot that they only need to select one pair? How many will select the easiest pair rather than just the first two in the list?....... This is from the “Something in Common” collection of resources by John Burke. They allow consolidation of key skills, prevent students from copying each other (as all the questions are different), make marking and assessing easy for the teacher (as all the answers are the same!), and provide a lovely extra challenge for students as they try to figure out exactly what is going on! To access the full collection, and read John’s background notes, please visit: http://www.mrbartonmaths.com/common.htm
Something in Common 16: Angle at Centre, Angle on Arc
MrBartonMathsMrBartonMaths

Something in Common 16: Angle at Centre, Angle on Arc

(0)
Earliest recommended Year group: Year 10. Discovery of two circle theorems. Pupils mark out angles on a chord and cut them out and compare. This is from the “Something in Common” collection of resources by John Burke. They allow consolidation of key skills, prevent students from copying each other (as all the questions are different), make marking and assessing easy for the teacher (as all the answers are the same!), and provide a lovely extra challenge for students as they try to figure out exactly what is going on! To access the full collection, and read John’s background notes, please visit: http://www.mrbartonmaths.com/common.htm
Something in Common 15: Magic Fractions
MrBartonMathsMrBartonMaths

Something in Common 15: Magic Fractions

(0)
Earliest recommended Year group: Year 7. Based on the nRich task. Using their own numbers (following a rule) the pupils form fractions and carry out operations on them. All answers are the same. This is from the “Something in Common” collection of resources by John Burke. They allow consolidation of key skills, prevent students from copying each other (as all the questions are different), make marking and assessing easy for the teacher (as all the answers are the same!), and provide a lovely extra challenge for students as they try to figure out exactly what is going on! To access the full collection, and read John’s background notes, please visit: http://www.mrbartonmaths.com/common.htm
Something in Common 14: Integration Stretch
MrBartonMathsMrBartonMaths

Something in Common 14: Integration Stretch

(1)
Earliest recommended Year group: Year 13. A parabola is stretched - calculate the stretch factor to achieve the area bounded between the two. All parabolas are different but the stretch factors are the same. This is from the “Something in Common” collection of resources by John Burke. They allow consolidation of key skills, prevent students from copying each other (as all the questions are different), make marking and assessing easy for the teacher (as all the answers are the same!), and provide a lovely extra challenge for students as they try to figure out exactly what is going on! To access the full collection, and read John’s background notes, please visit: http://www.mrbartonmaths.com/common.htm
Something in Common 13: A Geometric Progression Problem
MrBartonMathsMrBartonMaths

Something in Common 13: A Geometric Progression Problem

(1)
Earliest recommended Year group: Year 12. From clues given about a geometric progression work out the possible solutions - all common ratios are the same and first terms are five times each other. This is from the “Something in Common” collection of resources by John Burke. They allow consolidation of key skills, prevent students from copying each other (as all the questions are different), make marking and assessing easy for the teacher (as all the answers are the same!), and provide a lovely extra challenge for students as they try to figure out exactly what is going on! To access the full collection, and read John’s background notes, please visit: http://www.mrbartonmaths.com/common.htm
Something in Common 12: Quad Tessellate
MrBartonMathsMrBartonMaths

Something in Common 12: Quad Tessellate

(0)
Earliest recommended Year group: Year 7. Get pupils to draw a quadrilateral that they think will not tessellate. Then reproduce it using the Geogebra file and show that it does. Then show a picture proof. This is from the “Something in Common” collection of resources by John Burke. They allow consolidation of key skills, prevent students from copying each other (as all the questions are different), make marking and assessing easy for the teacher (as all the answers are the same!), and provide a lovely extra challenge for students as they try to figure out exactly what is going on! To access the full collection, and read John’s background notes, please visit: http://www.mrbartonmaths.com/common.htm
Something in Common 11: Triangle XY Area
MrBartonMathsMrBartonMaths

Something in Common 11: Triangle XY Area

(0)
Earliest recommended Year group: Year 11. Work out the area of a triangle with an inscribed circle. Answers are all different but easily calculated from the given parameters. This is from the “Something in Common” collection of resources by John Burke. They allow consolidation of key skills, prevent students from copying each other (as all the questions are different), make marking and assessing easy for the teacher (as all the answers are the same!), and provide a lovely extra challenge for students as they try to figure out exactly what is going on! To access the full collection, and read John’s background notes, please visit: http://www.mrbartonmaths.com/common.htm
Something in Common 10: Magic Bag
MrBartonMathsMrBartonMaths

Something in Common 10: Magic Bag

(0)
Earliest recommended Year group: Year 12. Based on the nRich activitiy. An algebra task thinly disguised as a probability question. Answers are different but are consecutive triangular numbers. This is from the “Something in Common” collection of resources by John Burke. They allow consolidation of key skills, prevent students from copying each other (as all the questions are different), make marking and assessing easy for the teacher (as all the answers are the same!), and provide a lovely extra challenge for students as they try to figure out exactly what is going on! To access the full collection, and read John’s background notes, please visit: http://www.mrbartonmaths.com/common.htm
Something in Common 9: Brackets Out, Brackets In
MrBartonMathsMrBartonMaths

Something in Common 9: Brackets Out, Brackets In

(1)
Earliest recommended Year group: Year 12. Based on RISP 3 by Jonny Griffiths. Pupils have to simplify some algebra, that they have generated. All have the factor (x+1) This is from the “Something in Common” collection of resources by John Burke. They allow consolidation of key skills, prevent students from copying each other (as all the questions are different), make marking and assessing easy for the teacher (as all the answers are the same!), and provide a lovely extra challenge for students as they try to figure out exactly what is going on! To access the full collection, and read John’s background notes, please visit: http://www.mrbartonmaths.com/common.htm
Something in Common 8: Four Crescents
MrBartonMathsMrBartonMaths

Something in Common 8: Four Crescents

(0)
Earliest recommended Year group: Year 11. Four crescents are drawn around a rectangle. All rectangles are different and the area of the crescents is equal to the rectangle. Surd (area = 1) and non-surd (area = 900) versions available. This is from the “Something in Common” collection of resources by John Burke. They allow consolidation of key skills, prevent students from copying each other (as all the questions are different), make marking and assessing easy for the teacher (as all the answers are the same!), and provide a lovely extra challenge for students as they try to figure out exactly what is going on! To access the full collection, and read John’s background notes, please visit: http://www.mrbartonmaths.com/common.htm
Something in Common 7: Trapezium and Diagonals
MrBartonMathsMrBartonMaths

Something in Common 7: Trapezium and Diagonals

(0)
Earliest recommended Year group: Year 9. Work out the area of two triangles given the area of two others which all fit in a trapezium. Each problem is different but all the answers are the same. This is from the “Something in Common” collection of resources by John Burke. They allow consolidation of key skills, prevent students from copying each other (as all the questions are different), make marking and assessing easy for the teacher (as all the answers are the same!), and provide a lovely extra challenge for students as they try to figure out exactly what is going on! To access the full collection, and read John’s background notes, please visit: http://www.mrbartonmaths.com/common.htm
Something in Common 6: Annulus Volume of Revolution
MrBartonMathsMrBartonMaths

Something in Common 6: Annulus Volume of Revolution

(0)
Earliest recommended Year group: Year 13. Pupils are given different segments of circles and asked to calculate their volumes of revolution. They all have the same volume. This is from the “Something in Common” collection of resources by John Burke. They allow consolidation of key skills, prevent students from copying each other (as all the questions are different), make marking and assessing easy for the teacher (as all the answers are the same!), and provide a lovely extra challenge for students as they try to figure out exactly what is going on! To access the full collection, and read John’s background notes, please visit: http://www.mrbartonmaths.com/common.htm
Something in Common 5: A Circle Property
MrBartonMathsMrBartonMaths

Something in Common 5: A Circle Property

(0)
Earliest recommended Year group: Year 9. Based on RISP 9 from Jonny Griffiths. Pupils choose certain values and draw their own circle. All circles go through the origin. This is from the “Something in Common” collection of resources by John Burke. They allow consolidation of key skills, prevent students from copying each other (as all the questions are different), make marking and assessing easy for the teacher (as all the answers are the same!), and provide a lovely extra challenge for students as they try to figure out exactly what is going on! To access the full collection, and read John’s background notes, please visit: http://www.mrbartonmaths.com/common.htm
Something in Common 4: Parallelogram in Quadrilateral (compass)
MrBartonMathsMrBartonMaths

Something in Common 4: Parallelogram in Quadrilateral (compass)

(1)
Earliest recommended Year group: Year 9. Bisect the sides of a quadrilateral to get a parallelogram. All quadrilaterals are different but all parallelograms are identical. A compass will be needed to bisect the sides. This is from the “Something in Common” collection of resources by John Burke. They allow consolidation of key skills, prevent students from copying each other (as all the questions are different), make marking and assessing easy for the teacher (as all the answers are the same!), and provide a lovely extra challenge for students as they try to figure out exactly what is going on! To access the full collection, and read John’s background notes, please visit: http://www.mrbartonmaths.com/common.htm
Something in Common 3: Parallelogram in Quadrilateral (Grid)
MrBartonMathsMrBartonMaths

Something in Common 3: Parallelogram in Quadrilateral (Grid)

(1)
Earliest recommended Year group: Year 8. Bisect the sides of a quadrilateral to get a parallelogram. All quadrilaterals are different but all parallelograms are identical. The grid allows easy bisection This is from the “Something in Common” collection of resources by John Burke. They allow consolidation of key skills, prevent students from copying each other (as all the questions are different), make marking and assessing easy for the teacher (as all the answers are the same!), and provide a lovely extra challenge for students as they try to figure out exactly what is going on! To access the full collection, and read John’s background notes, please visit: http://www.mrbartonmaths.com/common.htm