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Andy Lutwyche's Shop

Average Rating4.68
(based on 8559 reviews)

I have been a teacher for over 20 years - all the stuff I upload has been tried and tested in my classroom. I don't mind a discussion on Twitter too where I also share new resources. I now have a personal website: https://andylutwyche.com/

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I have been a teacher for over 20 years - all the stuff I upload has been tried and tested in my classroom. I don't mind a discussion on Twitter too where I also share new resources. I now have a personal website: https://andylutwyche.com/
HCF and LCM (Using Prime Factors) Codebreaker
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HCF and LCM (Using Prime Factors) Codebreaker

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More questions are turning up with massive numbers given as a product of prime factors and students being asked to find the HCF or LCM, so therefore I did a codebreaker for it. The usual stuff: maths, punchline, hahaha.
Standard Form (Non-Calculator) Codebreaker
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Standard Form (Non-Calculator) Codebreaker

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I’ve noticed that standard form questions are being set where the powers are too large for calculator use so I did a codebreaker like it. The usual stuff: answer the questions, reveal the punchline.
Perimeter, Area, Volume - Fill In The Blanks 1
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Perimeter, Area, Volume - Fill In The Blanks 1

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Looking at shapes like rectangles, squares, triangles, cuboids and cylinders, fill in the missing parts of the table. This is designed to get students thinking rather than going into algorithm mode. I plan to make a second one with more complex shapes eventually.
Fractions, Decimals, Percentages Blocks
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Fractions, Decimals, Percentages Blocks

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This asks students to estimate where a given fraction, decimal or percentage should be within a block; this uses students’ knowledge of the conversion between the three. Inspired by Professor Smudge (Twitter: @ProfSmudge).
Fraction Blocks
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Fraction Blocks

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Estimate where each fraction is given a “marker” fraction. This is designed to get students thinking about the relative sizes of fractions including multiples and “factors” of the fractions. A discussion about how they reached their answer is what I’m planning to do, but you may well have better ideas. Inspired by Professor Smudge (on Twitter: @ProfSmudge) and his blog (decimalicious.blogspot.com)
Statistical Diagrams - Fill In The Blanks
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Statistical Diagrams - Fill In The Blanks

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This looks at basic statistical diagrams: pictograms, bar charts and pie charts. There are four pages, one for each of the above and the final one being the same data represented by all three charts mentioned, but with bits missing on each. For each there are blanks to be filled, plus a question on the data. The idea is to get the students working forwards and backwards, not just getting stuck in a rut of doing the same thing repeatedly.
Sequences - Fill In Blanks
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Sequences - Fill In Blanks

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Some of the first four terms, the nth term, the term-to-term rule, the 20th term and the 50th term are missing and you have to fill in the blanks (it does what it says on the tin). Should get them thinking…
Tranforming Functions (Coordinates) Spiders
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Tranforming Functions (Coordinates) Spiders

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Four spiders which are easiest at 12 o’clock then get harder clockwise; they also allow for debate about what function fits the coordinates given. These are designed to stop students just following a set of rules and to get them thinking; I hope it works!
Transforming Functions Worksheet
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Transforming Functions Worksheet

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I realised that I have very little on this topic, so I came up with this. Four different functions, each with five transformations of increasing difficulty and students need to find where a point moves to. Error corrected!
Angles Using Algebra
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Angles Using Algebra

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This came from observing a colleague and an idea of making students use their knowledge in a more general way. I have gone from basic angle facts up to circle theorems. I have also (acting on advice) given example reasoning for students to circle on some questions…
Circle Theorems - Fill In The Blanks
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Circle Theorems - Fill In The Blanks

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Four sections of increasingly difficult circle theorem problems, some where students need to draw the question given some of the solution. Explanations are involved in every question too.
March 2023 Codebreaker Bundle
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March 2023 Codebreaker Bundle

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Around 25 codebreakers (answer the questions, reveal the punchline to a joke) in this bundle. There are a number aimed at covering parts of the AQA Further Maths Level 2 Certificate but also ones covering topics on the GCSE curriculum too. Each of these is individually available for free but if you want all of them they are available here.