Ideal for GCSE revision, this worksheet contains exam-type questions that gradually increase in difficulty. This sheet covers Converting Recurring Decimals into Fractions. Look out for the last few questions on the sheet - they could (and have) come up!
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Answers are included, as is a NEW STYLE of PowerPoint, which allows individual questions to be selected for enlarged display onto a screen. The answer can then be worked out ‘live’ by the teacher (or student) or a single click will reveal my solution. This not only helps in class, but it is also very useful for a student who is revising at home 😀.
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These review sheets are great to use in class or as a homework. They are also excellent for one-to-one tuition and for interventions.
For similar-style revision sheets on other topics, click 👉 tes.com/../more...
Answers are included, as is a NEW STYLE of PowerPoint, which allows individual questions to be selected for enlarged display onto a screen. The answer can then be worked out ‘live’ by the teacher (or student) or a single click will reveal my solution. This not only helps in class, but it is also very useful for a student who is revising at home 😀.
👍If you like this resource, then please rate it and/or leave a comment💬.
If the rate-resource button on this page does not work, then go to your ratings page by clicking here 👉tes.com/.../rate-resources…
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Great resource. One query about D4 though, 3y in your working has been used to both mean a 3 followed by a y (place value) and a 3 multiplied by y 3y. If you assume it is place value then you actually end up with (30+y)/90 and if you assume it is multiplied, you sometimes end up with y/3
Thank you for sharing your hard work
Excellent - thank you
Great, thanks for sharing
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