I provide comprehensive worksheets to revise a particular topic (always with answers included) as well as extension materials, for pupils ranging from age about 11 to 16+.
All of my premium resources have a UK and US version.
I provide comprehensive worksheets to revise a particular topic (always with answers included) as well as extension materials, for pupils ranging from age about 11 to 16+.
All of my premium resources have a UK and US version.
Two Power Point slides of lesson starters for Distance Speed Time.
The first involves reading a timetable, converting the time from hours and minutes to hours, then finding a speed (and for advanced pupils thinking about why the speed is so slow).
The second will take longer and involves converting m/s to km/h, then an extended question about a boat journey which involves a few calculations then drawing a distance-time graph.
Solutions included on the Power Points.
his is 12 sets of questions covering a range of topics. They can be used in class, as revision or as homework. Full solutions included.
The topics covered are:
• Question Set 1: Mixed arithmetic, time, algebra and negative numbers
• Question Set 2: Statistics and Numeracy practice
• Question Set 3: Statistics, Time and Big Numbers
• Question Set 4: Statistics, Negatives, Co-ordinates & Scales
• Question Set 5: Statistics, Algebra, Numeracy
• Question Set 6: Fractions, Decimals, Percentages and Units
• Question Set 7: Decimals, Mean and Multiplication
• Question Set 8: Area Division Coordinates and Patterns
• Question Set 9: Stats, Volume, Time & Money
• Question Set 10: Area, Angles, Perimeter & Money
• Question Set 11: Numeracy, Area, Angles, Coordinates
• Question Set 12: Area, Angles and Accurate Drawing
A write-on worksheet with 18 short questions revising exact values of trigonometry,
Most questions simple e.g. sin(60) and also includes angles above 90 degrees, radians and a few questions on inverse trig.
Solutions at the end.
A Power Point to (start to) answer the question of why we have 60 minutes in an hour. Wouldn't it be much easier if there were 100?
Includes a few simple questions for pupils on finding fractions of 60.
Practice in forming and solving simultaneous equations.
We often talk about equations being 'in balance' and 'doing the same to both sides'. This worksheet makes that visual idea very obvious to pupils as they are presented with a series of balanced seesaws with animals on them. Each pair of seesaws leads to a pair of simultaneous equations, which can then be solved in the usual way, to find the weight of each animal.
Provided with solutions.
Four worksheets of vectors questions all with full solutions
Vectors #1 Column Vectors - writing as a column vector
Vectors #2 Addition and Magnitude - add, subtract, find magnitude in 2D and 3D
Vectors #3 Pathways and Coordinates - reading pathways, midpoints, 3D coordinates (answer fixed June 2024)
Vectors #4 Mix - magnitude, adding, 3D coordinates, pathways
A set of resources for whole class bingo. All the questions are pretty easy. Covering these topics:
- decimals
- fractions
- money
- whole numbers
- coins (more money)
A fun activity to do alone or in pairs. Tests simple fraction skills (adding, simplifying, some equivalent fractions). Solution provided.
Based on an original by eam_larkin.
A series of fun challenges working out what comes next. Some are mathematical, some require more lateral thinking.
Good as an extension activity.
Full solutions provided.
A fun crossword to be done alone or in pairs. Tests easy decimals (addition, subtraction, multiplication, division).
Solution provided.
Based on original by eam_larkin.
A set of 15 short but interesting maths puzzles that lead pupils around the school. The questions require no special maths knowledge and can be done for ages 10+.
I’ve filled in the maths clues, you will need to add the 15 locations to the clues and hide them around the school.
I’ve done this with a whole year group before in the school grounds - because the clues go in a loop they can start anywhere.
Once a pair/team have done all 15 clues they can come to you for the ‘final challenge’.
Full answers provided.
This is a free-standing resource on ordering decimal numbers.
It involves questions like 3 x 500 up to things like 300 x 22 ÷ 60
It's taken from a Murder Mystery Package I wrote hence it includes a small riddle element at the end. There are two levels of difficulty (A is easier than B) that both have the same solution.
Full solutions included.
A great way to introduce formulas, with a fun activity to estimate how fast your reaction time is.
The Power Point introduces the idea of reaction time then shows pupils a simple experiment they can do, which leads to a formula for converting centimetres on a ruler to reaction time in seconds.
A whole class activity:
- a picture is cut into pieces
- each pupil makes a scale drawing of their part
- the class put them all together
Good for practicing scale drawings and having some fun.
Six challenges showing where Pi turns up unexpectedly
Easy (Secondary School) - Simplifying fractions, Square root of two
Medium (GCSE level) - Fibonacci numbers and area of polygons
Hard (A level) - Probability theory, Area of a circle