Powepoint working through understanding, representing and solving inequalities. Largely aimed at Foundation students at GCSE or KS3 students. Slides at the end can be copied to act as worksheets or use the Word document.
Revision powerpoint on interior and exterior angles. This does not attempt to teach this from the beginning but is useful for revision. It shows how to find other angles/number of sides given one piece of information. Includes a number of questions on worksheet that can be used as well.
A KS3 powerpoint lesson plan which investigates gradients and how they are measured, comparing the signs on roads with the mathematical calculation. Shows pictures of roads etc. and their gradient measurements and asks students to think about how they are calculated and the equivalencies. Finishes with some examples to calculate gradients. Notes of usage of each slide at the bottom of each slide. Will take about half an hour depending on class. I have used this with a low set year 10.
A GCSE powerpoint with a series of exam questions involving triangles. Each question is on a separate page and has a choice of 3 topic areas which it could concern. Students have to pick the correct area. Each suggestion is in a green/yellow/red box so students can indicate using cards which is correct or on whiteboards. Useful to get students thinking about the variety of questions that triangles can generate, and good to then go on and look at some of the questions. Mostly Higher, with some Foundation questions. Word document gives questions used and mark scheme for use as handout
These questions are about using algebra to find missing side lengths etc. in rectangles, triangles and trapezium. They are around Grade C level but a couple require quite a bit of thought. I couldn't find enough of these in one other place hence writing these. I have used them with year 11s but they could also be used in year 9 or 10 depending on the set you are teaching. They get progessively harder.
This has been written for the AQA Linked Pair Pilot - Applications Unit 2.
It is about finding gradients at points and areas under curves without calculus.
Powerpoint takes students through the process - two of the slides can usefully be printed out as worksheets. Brief notes for usage on each slide.
5 questions which require students to find missing sides in volume questions (cuboids, cylinders and triangular prism). They could be used with KS3 or KS4. Some require a bit more thinking than others.
Powerpoint that runs through how to solve simultaneous equations stressing the different types and what to do with them. Questions incorporated into powerpoint (answers in notes)
This is an adaptation of a resoure already added by someone else.
Each slide shows a question about multiples, factors, primes, or divisiblity. Students hold up red or green card according to whether they think it true or false. Students should be asked to justify their decision.
This is a short starter activity to get students thinking about rounding answers according to the context they are given. There is one calculation which is used in each calculation but the answers are different each time.
<p>Simple addtion exercise which tells the child if their answer is correct.</p><p>This is similar to the resource already submitted, but now you can change the sums and it will still mark the answers. Saves having to do a new worksheet each time!</p>
Two powerpoint resources to check understanding either before revision or after topic has been taught. Each slide has a question and three possible answers - red, yellow and green. Students can right R, Y or G on whiteboards, or hold up coloured card (we have them in our diaries!)
This is a powerpoint with notes. It is useful to introduce the idea of transformations of quadratics for higher GCSE students. It gets them to recognise the different types of quadratic equations and the elements that will affect the way the quadratic will look, matching to different graphs.
Simple starter activity. How could the rugby scores have been obtained by the different teams. Useful for early secondary years or primary years. Scores can obviously be changed to suit which games have been played. This was done at the start of the 2012 six nations competition.