Powerpoint and differentiated worksheets for ratio. The worksheets are identical bar the bingo sheet which is subtly different on each. Worksheet 3 should win bingo first.
3 worksheets on 3D coordinates where x and y axes remain in the same position as 2D. Variety of questions increasing in difficulty as they progress. Worksheets incorporate other topics such as area, volume, Pythagoras and trigonometry.<br />
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Answer sheets scanned in too.
Powerpoint and worksheet activities to introduce the topic of surds, initially created for a top set Y9 30 minute interview lesson but could be used for Y10 or 11 too. Some bits will undoubtedly be taken from other TES users, happy to credit other users if you let me know.
Lesson on volume and surface area of a cylinder. I bought some small and large tape and some gluesticks from Poundland as items to measure and calculate volume & SA. You can delete / replace with alternatives if preferred.<br />
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This lesson must follow sufficient lesson time on prism area and volume.
Used this for an interview lesson.
Give a third of the group the sin sheet (print on blue), a third cos sheet (print on yellow) and a third the tan sheet (print on white). Get the students to measure the angles in the triangles and two of the sides (dependent on which sheet they have). Then get them to put the values into the calculator to discover the sin, cos, tan features. Introduce SOH CAH TOA and build from there.
Updated with PDFs as requested
These are questions from Michael White's GCSE textbook. I've split them across 6 cards to give as extension work for those who need it. I take no credit for the questions but if you are not using the White textbook as your main textbook then these provide some good additional questions to try.
<p>These sheets are used during the first lesson of each topic. They are set up to show the formula used, two worked examples (that you do as a group on the board and they fill in on the sheet) then a selection of questions to start off the topic. The idea is these are all topics that require substitution into a formula and have solids (or sectors) that students won’t necessarily be able to draw examples of. I like to have these as the first page so that they have strong notes to refer back to and even if they don’t draw any diagrams for subsequent questions, they at least have the key formula and some examples to revise from.</p>
<p>Topic include:<br />
Volume of a Pyramid<br />
Volume of a Cone<br />
Surface Area of a Cone<br />
Volume & Surface Area of Spheres<br />
Arc Lengths<br />
Sector Areas</p>
<p>Answers also included.</p>
A PPT to accompany Stephen2107's excellent resource on personal finance. My LOs are different so you'll need to change these if you want them to match.
This is a helpsheet with examples of how to expand double brackets using both FOIL and grid method. There are some differentiated questions and answers too. Nothing too flashy and I tend to use as an extension task for those who have mastered single brackets rather than as a formal introduction to expanding double brackets. Might be useful.
Use a revision task for Core 1 circles. 4 cards to match, 1 with centre and radius, one with a diagram of the circle, 1 with the factorised form of the equation of the circle and 1 with the expanded form of the equation.
Task for students to perform inverse operations to find the correct number. Two sheets, one where just numbers are used and one where expressions are required.