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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/
Partial Fractions Codebreakers
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Partial Fractions Codebreakers

(5)
The mandatory terrible joke revealed by finding some partial fractions. Sheet 2 involves the cover up rule and both involve fractional as well as negative numerators.
Spot The Mistakes - Ratio
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Spot The Mistakes - Ratio

(4)
This is a twist on revision notes. I have written some notes and given examples but there are mistakes that the students have to correct. They must therefore read the notes very carefully and a partner must check their work. The idea is derived from an idea born from a discussion on Twitter (if you're not on Twitter, seriously think about it). I have split the notes up into two bits but I have included the whole thing so that you can chop them up your own way, or change stuff if you want. It&'s a bit of an experiment and we&';ll see how it goes!
Popeye's Bounds
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Popeye's Bounds

(5)
Calculate the upper and lower bounds of the amount of spinach in a can, what each gram of spinach will allow Popeye to lift and various other stuff.
Music Industry Trends
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Music Industry Trends

(5)
From a link on Twitter (thank you @beetlebug1) I put together this as an activity to describe the trends in sales in the music industry. This involves predictions too and should get students to read the pie charts carefully, seeing how statistics are used in a context they are familiar with.
Rearranging Explosions
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Rearranging Explosions

(8)
I am about to tackle rearranging formulae (a topic so many find difficult) with my Year 10 class so came up with this in an attempt to make them more comfortable with playing with algebra; it should also encourage discussion about different ways of doing it.
KS2 / KS3: Pacman Maths Worksheet
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KS2 / KS3: Pacman Maths Worksheet

(4)
KS2 / KS3 Maths. This is simple rotation and writing coherent instructions using Pacman as a model. It is designed to be an introduction to rotation and transformations.
Two Proportion Problems
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Two Proportion Problems

(7)
Real-life problems involving direct and inverse proportion showing students that they don't have to be a mthematical whizz in order to understand the topic.
Speed Camera Dilemma - Box Plots
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Speed Camera Dilemma - Box Plots

(9)
A student asked me in a lesson today 'Who is ever going to use this in real life?'. So I did this as an example. Students choose on which 2 of 5 roads should speed cameras be installed and explain why they made their choice.
Clumsy Clive On Expanding Two Brackets and Factorising Quadratics
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Clumsy Clive On Expanding Two Brackets and Factorising Quadratics

(6)
Clive's made mistakes on his homework again. This time it is on expanding two brackets and factorising quadratics. Students need to find Clive's error in each question and involve common mistakes I've seen made in class and in tests/exams. These are designed to assess understanding and to generate discussion.
Generating Sequences
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Generating Sequences

(3)
This uses term-to-term rules to get students to generate sequences then moves onto finding position-to-term rules and possibly nth terms if appropriate (with the sequences paired to an extent).
Enlargement - Explain Your Reasoning
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Enlargement - Explain Your Reasoning

(8)
Increasingly difficult questions from D grade up to A grade and with a 'Red, Amber, Green' table to fill in their progress. I've said that it can be used at KS3 as well, because I reckon that they will figure out the tougher stuff. (One mistake now corrected.)
Tour de Distance-Time Calculations
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Tour de Distance-Time Calculations

(5)
Using Stage 8 of the 2013 Tour de France, a stage won by Chris Froome, can you use his timings (as accurate as I could get from the official Tour website) to answer the questions. It’s basically speed calculations. There are links to the website and a video ‘hook’ at the beginning.
Estimation Warehouse
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Estimation Warehouse

(7)
No power and therefore no access to phones (battery's run out) so estimating in your head it is then! Four fairly simple calculations (I've called the final one a challenge as it involves more steps) that could lead to further discussion, something I have added/given the option to people in after the answers are revealed in the powerpoint. You can either do straight from the powerpoint or from the worksheet (saving the planet option available therefore).
Clumsy Clive On Perimeter, Area and Volume
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Clumsy Clive On Perimeter, Area and Volume

(5)
Clive has three homework tasks on perimeter, area and volume, each getting increasingly difficult. As usual his answers are riddled with mistakes and it’s down to you to correct them, explaining where he’s gone wrong. These are intended to encourage discussion between students. I have corrected the error on sheet 2 mentioned in the comments - thank you!