Cookie Consent
We use cookies to help provide a better website experience for you, and help us to understand how people use our website. Our partners will also collect data and use cookies for ad personalisation and measurement.
Clicking "Accept" will allow us and our partners to use cookies, learn more in our cookie policy or to change your cookie preferences, click "Manage".
To find out more about cookies and the types of cookies we are setting please visit our cookie policy .
If you'd prefer that certain types of cookie are not saved on your browser when visiting our website, use the toggles below to adjust those preferences and click "Save choices".
Strictly Necessary
These cookies are necessary for the website to function and without them you would not be able to reliably use the website. For example, logging into your account or completing forms.
Analytics Cookies
A series of cookies that collect anonymised data on how users interact with our website. This anonymous data helps us improve the website with a focus on its users, for example, ensuring the most popular content is easier to access.
View associated providers +
Marketing Cookies
These cookies track your online activity to help advertisers deliver more relevant and personalised advertising or to limit how many times you see an ad. These cookies can share that information with other organisations or advertisers.
Mastery-Aligned Maths Tutoring
“The best thing has been the increase in confidence and tutors being there to deal with any misunderstandings straight away."
FREE daily maths challenges
A new KS2 maths challenge every day. Perfect as lesson starters - no prep required!
25 Fun Maths Problems For KS2 And KS3 (From Easy To Very Hard!)
Fun maths problems are one of the things mathematicians love about the subject; they provide an opportunity to apply mathematical knowledge, logic and problem solving skills all at once. In this article, we’ve compiled 25 fun maths problems, each covering various topics and question types. They’re aimed at students in KS2 & KS3. We’ve categorised them as:
Maths word problems
Maths puzzles, fraction problems, multiplication and division problems, geometry problems, problem solving questions, maths puzzles are everywhere, how should teachers use these maths problems.
Teachers could make use of these maths problem solving questions in a number of ways, such as:
- embed into a relevant maths topic’s teaching.
- settling tasks at the beginning of lessons.
- break up or extend a maths worksheet.
- keep students thinking mathematically after the main lesson has finished.
Some are based on real life or historical maths problems, and some include ‘bonus’ maths questions to help to extend the problem solving fun! As you read through these problems, think about how you could adjust them to be relevant to your students or to practise different skills.
These maths problems can also be used as introductory puzzles for maths games such as those introduced at the following links:
- KS2 maths games
- KS3 maths games
Need more support teaching reasoning, problem solving and planning for depth ? Read here for free CPD for you and your team of teachers.
1. Home on time – easy
Type: Time, Number, Addition
A cinema screening starts at 14:35. The movie lasts for 2 hours, 32 minutes after 23 minutes of adverts. It took 20 minutes to get to the cinema. What time should you tell your family that you’ll be home?
Answer: 17:50
2. A nugget of truth – mixed
Type: Times Tables, Multiplication, Multiples, Factors, Problem Solving
Chicken nuggets come in boxes of 6, 9 or 20, so you can’t order 7 chicken nuggets. How many other impossible quantities can you find (not including fractions or decimals)?
Answer: 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 7, 8, 10, 11, 13, 14, 16, 17, 19, 22, 23, 25, 28, 31, 34, 37, or 43
There is actually a theorem which can be used to prove that every integer quantity greater than 43 can be ordered.
3. A pet problem – mixed
Type: Number, Problem Solving, Forming and Solving Equations, Simultaneous Equations, Algebra
Eight of my pets aren’t dogs, five aren’t rabbits, and seven aren’t cats. How many pets do I have?
Answer: 10 pets (5 rabbits, 3 cats, 2 dogs)
4. The price of things – mixed
Type: lateral thinking problem
A mouse costs £10, a bee costs £15, and a spider costs £20. How much does a duck cost? Answer: £5 (£2.50 per leg)
Looking for more word problems, solutions and explanations? Read our article on word problems for primary school.
25 Fun Maths Problems - Printable
Download a printable version of these fun maths problems together with answers and mark scheme.
5. A dicey maths challenge – easy
Type: Place value, number, addition, problem solving
Roll three dice to generate three place value digits. What’s the biggest number you can make out of these digits? What’s the smallest number you can make?
Add these two numbers together. What do you get?
Answer: In most cases, 1,089.
Bonus: Who got a different result? Why?
6. PIN problem solving – mixed
Type: Logic, problem solving, reasoning
I’ve forgotten my PIN. Six incorrect attempts locks my account: I’ve used five! Two digits are displayed after each unsuccessful attempt: “2, 0” means 2 digits from that guess are in the PIN, but 0 are in the right place.
What should my sixth attempt be?
Answer: 6347
7. So many birds – mixed
Type: Triangular Numbers, Sequences, Number, Problem Solving
On the first day of Christmas my true love gave me one gift. On the second day they gave me another pair of gifts plus a copy of what they gave me on day one. On day 3, they gave me three new gifts, plus another copy of everything they’d already given me. If they keep this up, how many gifts will I have after twelve days?
Answer: 364
Bonus: This could be calculated as 1 + (1 + 2) + (1 + 2 + 3) + … but is there an easier way? What percentage of my gifts do I receive on each day?
8. I 8 sum maths questions – mixed
Type: Number, Place Value, Addition, Problem Solving, Reasoning
Using only addition and the digit 8, can you make 1,000? You can put 8s together to make 88, for example.
Answer: 888 + 88 + 8 + 8 + 8 = 1,000 Bonus: Which other digits allow you to get 1,000 in this way?
9. Quizzical – easy
Type: Fractions, Adding Fractions, Equivalent Fractions, Fractions to Percentages
4 friends entered a maths quiz. One answered \frac{1}{5} of the maths questions, one answered \frac{1}{10} , one answered \frac{1}{4} , and the other answered \frac{4}{25} . What percentage of the questions did they answer altogether?
Answer: 71%
10. Ancient problem solving – mixed
Type: Fractions, Reasoning, Problem Solving
Ancient Egyptians only used unit fractions (like \frac{1}{2} , \frac{1}{3} or \frac{1}{4} ). For \frac{2}{3} , they’d write \frac{1}{3} + \frac{1}{3} . How might they write \frac{5}{8} ?
Answer: \frac{1}{8} + \frac{1}{8} + \frac{1}{8} + \frac{1}{8} + \frac{1}{8} is correct. So is \frac{1}{2} + \frac{1}{8} .
Bonus: Which solution is better? Why? Can you find any more? What if subtractions are allowed?
Learn more about unit fractions here
11. everybody wants a pizza the action – hard.
An infinite number of mathematicians buy pizza. The first wants \frac{1}{2} pizza. The second wants \frac{1}{4} pizza. The third & fourth want \frac{1}{8} and \frac{1}{16} each, and so on. How many pizzas should they order?
Answer: 1 Each successive mathematician wants a slice that is exactly half of what is left:
12. Shade it black – hard
Type: Fractions, Reasoning, Problem Solving What fraction of this image is shaded black?
Answer: \frac{1}{3}
Look at the L-shaped part made up of two white and one black squares: \frac{1}{3} of this part is shaded. Zoom in on the top-right quarter of the image, which looks exactly the same as the whole image, and use the same reasoning to find what fraction of its L-shaped portion is shaded. Imagine zooming in to do the same thing again and again…
13. Giving is receiving – easy
Type: Number, Reasoning, Problem Solving
5 people give each other a present. How many presents are given altogether?
14. Sharing is caring – mixed
I have 20 sweets. If I share them equally with my friends, there are 2 left over. If one more person joins us, there are 6 sweets left. How many friends am I with?
Answer: 6 people altogether (so 5 friends!)
15. Times tables secrets – mixed
Type: Area, 2D Shape, Rectangles
Here are 77 letters:
BYHRCGNGNEOEAAHGHGCURPUTSTSASHHSBOBOREOPEEMEMEELATPEPEFADPHLTLTUT IEEOHOHLENRYTITIIAGBMTNTNFCGEIIGIG
How many different rectangular grids could you arrange all 77 letters into?
Answer: Four: 1⨉77, 77⨉1, 11⨉7 & 7⨉11. If the letters are arranged into one of these, a message appears, reading down each column starting from the top left.
Bonus: Can you find any more integers with the same number of factors as 77? What do you notice about these factors (think about prime numbers)? Can you use this system to hide your own messages?
16. Laugh it up – hard
Type: Multiples, Lowest Common Multiple, Times Tables, Division, Time
One friend jumps every \frac{1}{3} of a minute. Another jumps every 31 seconds. When will they jump together? Answer: After 620 seconds
17. Pictures of matchstick triangles – easy
Type: 2D Shapes, Equilateral Triangles, Problem Solving, Reasoning
Look at the matchsticks arranged below. How many equilateral triangles are there?
Answer: 13 (9 small, 3 medium, 1 large)
Bonus: What if the biggest triangle only had two matchsticks on each side? What if it had four?
18. Dissecting squares – mixed
Type: Reasoning, Problem Solving
What’s the smallest number of straight lines you could draw on this grid such that each square has a line going through it?
19. Make it right – mixed
Type: Pythagoras’ theorem
This triangle does not agree with Pythagoras’ theorem.
Adding, subtracting, multiplying or dividing each of the side lengths by the same integer can fix it. What is the integer?
Answer: 3
8 – 3 = 5
The new side lengths are 3, 4 and 5 and 32 + 42 = 52.
20. A most regular maths question – hard
Type: Polygons, 2D Shapes, tessellation, reasoning, problem-solving, patterns
What is the regular polygon with the largest number of sides that will self-tessellate?
Answer: Hexagon.
Regular polygons tessellate if one interior angle is a factor of 360°. The interior angle of a hexagon is 120°. This is the largest factor less than 180°.
21. Pleased to meet you – easy
Type: Number Problem, Reasoning, Problem-Solving
5 people meet; each shakes everyone else’s hand once. How many handshakes take place?
Person A shakes 4 people’s hands. Person B has already shaken Person A’s hand, so only needs to shake 3 more, and so on.
Bonus: How many handshakes would there be if you did this with your class?
22. All relative – easy
Type: Number, Reasoning, Problem-Solving
When I was twelve my brother was half my age. I’m 40 now, so how old is he?
23. It’s about time – mixed
Type: Time, Reasoning, Problem-Solving
When is “8 + 10 = 6” true?
Answer: When you’re telling the time (8am + 10 hours = 6pm)
24. More than a match – mixed
Type: Reasoning, Problem-Solving, Roman Numerals, Numerical Notation
Here are three matches:
How can you add two more matches, but get eight? Answer: Put the extra two matches in a V shape to make 8 in Roman Numerals:
25. Leonhard’s graph – hard
Type: Reasoning, Problem-Solving, Logic
Leonhard’s town has seven bridges as shown below. Can you find a route around the town that crosses every bridge exactly once?
Answer: No!
This is a classic real life historical maths problem solved by mathematician Leonhard Euler (rhymes with “boiler”). The city was Konigsberg in Prussia (now Kaliningrad, Russia). Not being able to find a solution is different to proving that there aren’t any! Euler managed to do this in 1736, practically inventing graph theory in the process.
Many of these 25 maths problems are rooted in real life, from everyday occurrences to historical events. Others are just questions that might arise if you say “what if…?”. The point is that although there are many lists of such problem solving maths questions that you can make use of, with a little bit of experience and inspiration you could create your own on almost any topic – and so could your students.
For a kick-starter on creating your own maths problems, read our article on KS3 maths problem solving .
Looking for additional support and resources at KS3? You are welcome to download any of the secondary maths resources from Third Space Learning’s resource library for free. There is a section devoted to GCSE maths revision with plenty of maths worksheets and GCSE maths questions . There are also maths tests for KS3, including a Year 7 maths test , a Year 8 maths test and a Year 9 maths test Other valuable maths practice and ideas particularly around reasoning and problem solving at secondary can be found in our KS3 and KS4 maths blog articles. Try these fun maths problems for KS2 and KS3, SSDD problems , KS3 maths games and 30 problem solving maths questions . For children who need more support, our maths intervention programmes for KS3 achieve outstanding results through a personalised one to one tuition approach.
DO YOU HAVE STUDENTS WHO NEED MORE SUPPORT IN MATHS?
Every week Third Space Learning’s specialist online maths tutors support thousands of students across hundreds of schools with weekly online 1 to 1 maths lessons designed to plug gaps and boost progress.
Since 2013 these personalised one to 1 lessons have helped over 150,000 primary and secondary students become more confident, able mathematicians.
Learn how the programmes are aligned to maths mastery teaching or request a personalised quote for your school to speak to us about your school’s needs and how we can help.
Related articles
Maths Problem Solving: Engaging Your Students And Strengthening Their Mathematical Skills
Free Year 7 Maths Test With Answers And Mark Scheme: Mixed Topic Questions
What Is A Number Square? Explained For Primary School Teachers, Parents & Pupils
What Is Numicon? Explained For Primary School Teachers, Parents And Pupils
FREE Guide to Maths Mastery
All you need to know to successfully implement a mastery approach to mathematics in your primary school, at whatever stage of your journey.
Ideal for running staff meetings on mastery or sense checking your own approach to mastery.
Privacy Overview
- Primary Hub
- Art & Design
- Design & Technology
- Health & Wellbeing
- Secondary Hub
- Citizenship
- Primary CPD
- Secondary CPD
- Book Awards
- All Products
- Primary Products
- Secondary Products
- School Trips
- Trip Directory
- Trips by Subject
- Trips by Type
- Trips by Region
- Submit a Trip Venue
Trending stories
Top results
- Teaching Resources
- Ks2 Maths Worksheets
KS2 maths worksheets – Curriculum-aligned for Years 3-6
This series of free downloadable KS2 maths worksheets are all aligned with the curriculum. Answers are provided and fun illustrations and layouts will keep children engaged.
Reasoning/problem-solving
Introduce Year 3 pupils to reasoning and problem-solving through these highly engaging monster-themed KS2 maths worksheets.
Children need to apply their mathematical skills in a fun, imaginative context to work out how many legs different monsters should have. By calculating the number of legs, children develop their ability to think logically and improve their numerical reasoning.
This worksheet is perfect for group activities or individual challenges, promoting a love for maths early on.
Written addition one exchange
This Year 4 worksheet solidifies children’s understanding of addition, particularly focusing on the concept of carrying over (or exchanging). Pupils need to draw counters and place value charts to work out a list of addition sums.
Percentages
By Year 5, students are ready to tackle more complex mathematical concepts. These percentages KS2 maths worksheets sets out important facts to know about percentages, then offers a variety of questions for students to try.
In Year 6, data representation and interpretation become key areas of focus. These pie charts KS2 maths worksheets are designed to deepen students’ understanding of pie charts, a vital tool for displaying statistical information.
Through a series of exercises, students learn how to interpret and construct pie charts. This worksheet not only strengthens their data-handling skills but also prepares children for more advanced statistical analysis in future studies.
The team at URBrainy creates maths and English learning resources. Find out more at urbrainy.com
Similar resources
- KS1 time – Bus route lesson to teach time and calculation
- Position and direction Year 1 – Outdoor pirate-themed maths
- Water cycle KS2 – Activities for cross-curricular learning
- Number bonds to 10 games – Dice worksheets for KS1/2
- Christmas maths – KS1 number bonds and addition to 10
Sign up to our newsletter
You'll also receive regular updates from Teachwire with free lesson plans, great new teaching ideas, offers and more. (You can unsubscribe at any time.)
Which sectors are you interested in?
Early Years
Thank you for signing up to our emails!
Explore teaching packs
Why join Teachwire?
Get what you need to become a better teacher with unlimited access to exclusive free classroom resources and expert CPD downloads.
Exclusive classroom resource downloads
Free worksheets and lesson plans
CPD downloads, written by experts
Resource packs to supercharge your planning
Special web-only magazine editions
Educational podcasts & resources
Access to free literacy webinars
Newsletters and offers
Create free account
By signing up you agree to our terms and conditions and privacy policy .
Already have an account? Log in here
Thanks, you're almost there
To help us show you teaching resources, downloads and more you’ll love, complete your profile below.
Welcome to Teachwire!
Set up your account.
Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet consectetur adipisicing elit. Commodi nulla quos inventore beatae tenetur.
I would like to receive regular updates from Teachwire with free lesson plans, great new teaching ideas, offers and more. (You can unsubscribe at any time.)
Log in to Teachwire
Not registered with Teachwire? Sign up for free
Reset Password
Remembered your password? Login here
Every Question Helps You Learn
Well done, you scored out of 10. Your Streak will increase and as a reward for completing the quiz, meet “Curly” one of our favourite pets!
Bad Luck, you only scored out of 10. Your Streak will not increase but as a reward for completing the quiz, meet “Curly” one of our favourite pets!
Play more quizzes to see other favorite pooches
Back to Maths
Solving Problems (Year 3)
When you answer 8 or more questions correctly your red streak will increase in length. The green streak shows the best player so far today. See our Hall of Fame for previous daily winners.
Solving problems is like a fun adventure in KS2 Maths! In Year Three, we learn cool tricks to solve real-life puzzles. Using addition, subtraction, multiplication, and division, we crack codes in everyday situations.
Imagine your brain is a superhero cape—it gets a workout! Real-life problems involve numbers, time, length, capacity, and weight. With our superhero operations (+, -, ×, ÷), we become problem-solving champions—just figure out which one to use!
Ready for a challenge? Put on your thinking cap and take this quiz. Show off your super Maths skills by solving problems with addition, subtraction, multiplication, and division!
Contact Details
Education quizzes, customer service, here to help, our social circles.
© Copyright 2016-2024 - Education Quizzes Work Innovate Ltd - Design | Development | Marketing
We use cookies to enhance your experience on our website.
To comply with the e-Privacy directive, we need your consent - I agree - No thanks - Learn more
- Go to Dashboard
- My Children
- Childrens' Scores
- Student Scores
- Tutee Scores
- Games & Quizzes
- Code Breakers
- Topic Review Sheets
- KS2 SATS Questions
- GCSE Questions by Topic
- Past Paper Solutions
- User Guides
Or search by topic
Number and algebra
- The Number System and Place Value
- Calculations and Numerical Methods
- Fractions, Decimals, Percentages, Ratio and Proportion
- Properties of Numbers
- Patterns, Sequences and Structure
- Algebraic expressions, equations and formulae
- Coordinates, Functions and Graphs
Geometry and measure
- Angles, Polygons, and Geometrical Proof
- 3D Geometry, Shape and Space
- Measuring and calculating with units
- Transformations and constructions
- Pythagoras and Trigonometry
- Vectors and Matrices
Probability and statistics
- Handling, Processing and Representing Data
- Probability
Working mathematically
- Thinking mathematically
- Mathematical mindsets
- Cross-curricular contexts
- Physical and digital manipulatives
For younger learners
- Early Years Foundation Stage
Advanced mathematics
- Decision Mathematics and Combinatorics
- Advanced Probability and Statistics
Ratio and Proportion KS2
This collection is one of our Primary Curriculum collections - tasks that are grouped by topic.
Pumpkin Pie Problem
Peter wanted to make two pies for a party. His mother had a recipe for him to use. However, she always made 80 pies at a time. Did Peter have enough ingredients to make two pumpkin pies?
Rectangle Tangle
The large rectangle is divided into a series of smaller quadrilaterals and triangles. Can you untangle what fractional part is represented by each of the shapes?
In the Money
One quarter of these coins are heads but when I turn over two coins, one third are heads. How many coins are there?
Orange Drink
A 750 ml bottle of concentrated orange squash is enough to make fifteen 250 ml glasses of diluted orange drink. How much water is needed to make 10 litres of this drink?
Fraction Fascination
This problem challenges you to work out what fraction of the whole area of these pictures is taken up by various shapes.
After training hard, these two children have improved their results. Can you work out the length or height of their first jumps?
- International
- Education Jobs
- Schools directory
- Resources Education Jobs Schools directory News Search
Reasoning and Problem Solving Questions Collection - KS1 and KS2
Subject: Mathematics
Age range: 5-7
Resource type: Worksheet/Activity
Last updated
10 March 2023
- Share through email
- Share through twitter
- Share through linkedin
- Share through facebook
- Share through pinterest
These booklets each contain over 40 reasoning and problem solving questions suitable for KS1, KS2 and KS3 classes. These are the questions that we have been putting out each day in March 2016 on Twitter in the run up to SATS.
The answers are provided with some simple notes at the back of the booklet and for some problems supplementary questions and variation has been provided.
As always we welcome any feedback on the work we are doing and the materials that we are releasing. Thank you for taking an interest in our work. The White Rose Maths Hub Team
Creative Commons "Sharealike"
Your rating is required to reflect your happiness.
It's good to leave some feedback.
Something went wrong, please try again later.
TES Resource Team
We are pleased to let you know that your resource Reasoning and Problem Solving Questions Collection - KS1 and KS2, has been hand-picked by the Tes resources content team to be featured in https://www.tes.com/teaching-resources/blog/fluency-reasoning-and-problem-solving-primary-maths in April 2024 on https://www.tes.com/teaching-resources/blog. Congratulations on your resource being chosen and thank you for your ongoing contributions to the Tes Resources marketplace.
Empty reply does not make any sense for the end user
graceamfo18
A very good and engaging way to teach mastery of maths. Thank you for sharing
thank you for sharing, this is really good
Report this resource to let us know if it violates our terms and conditions. Our customer service team will review your report and will be in touch.
IMAGES
VIDEO
COMMENTS
Practice is crucial to maths success, and our questions are designed to support your daily routines. These problems can be used across Y1 and Y2 throughout the year. Download. Our maths problems of the day provide four problems across KS1, KS2 and Lower KS3 for pupils to solve. View our Maths resources from White Rose Maths.
Find out how we encourage children to approach problem solving independently in our blog: 20 Maths Strategies KS2 That Guarantee Progress for All Pupils. The most commonly used model is that of George Polya (1973), who proposed 4 stages in problem solving, namely: Understand the problem. Devise a strategy for solving it.
Try these fun maths problems for KS2 and KS3, SSDD problems, KS3 maths games and 30 problem solving maths questions. For children who need more support, our maths intervention programmes for KS3 achieve outstanding results through a personalised one to one tuition approach.
Write your answer as a decimal. 1 mark 44 3 2 - 1 3 = 3 4 1 mark 25 KS2 SATs Questions: Fractions, Decimals & Percentages ... 3 1 2 25 KS2 SATs Questions: Fractions, Decimals & Percentages ... 100 Reasoning & Problem Solving Questions for SATs thirdspacelearning.com 60 8,902.55 is partitioned (expanded). Fill in the missing ...
Short problems for Starters, Homework and Assessment. The links below take you to a selection of short problems based on UKMT junior and intermediate mathematical challenge questions. We have chosen these problems because they are ideal for consolidating and assessing subject knowledge, mathematical thinking and problem-solving skills.
This booklet contains over 40 reasoning and problem solving questions suitable for KS2 and KS3 classes. These are the questions that we have been putting out each day in March 2016 on Twitter in the run up to SATS. The answers are provided with some simple notes at the back of the booklet and for some questions supplementary questions and ...
Our exciting KS2 teaching resources will help introduce your year 3, year 4, year 5, and year 6 students to problem-solving and reasoning topics. Be sure to take a look at our fun and engaging maths word problems, maths investigations, and maths games, which can all be used with the accompanying key stage 2 worksheets and activities. Our fun ...
Here you can find a wide array of maths word problems from division to fractions and more. All are designed to help your Key Stage 2 pupils develop their problem-solving skills in a fun and engaging way! Choose from differentiated worksheets, challenge cards, fun activities and PowerPoints and tailor the learning experience to your teaching needs.
This series of free downloadable KS2 maths worksheets are all aligned with the curriculum. Answers are provided and fun illustrations and layouts will keep children engaged. Reasoning/problem-solving. Introduce Year 3 pupils to reasoning and problem-solving through these highly engaging monster-themed KS2 maths worksheets.
Maths Investigations for Year 3, 4, 5 and 6. Applying maths problems to real scenarios is a great way for KS2 students to develop their maths skills and to engage their learning more effectively. All of our investigation resources feature fun problem-solving activities that your students can get involved with and develop key maths skills! They ...
Solving Problems (Year 3) Solving problems is like a fun adventure in KS2 Maths! In Year Three, we learn cool tricks to solve real-life puzzles. Using addition, subtraction, multiplication, and division, we crack codes in everyday situations. Imagine your brain is a superhero cape—it gets a workout!
KS2 Maths CGP SAT Buster Answer Book Arithmetic • Number, Ratio & Algebra Geometry, Measures & Statistics ... Section 3 — Problem Solving and Algebra Pages 30 and 31 — Wordy Problems 1) 1 hour 10 mins £13.50 2) 77p ... 3) 270° clockwise 4) 135° (allow answers between 133° and 137°) 5) 84° ...
Reasoning and problem-solving questions (28), all with clue pages and go deeper challenges to support maths mastery over 86 PowerPoint pages. Includes modelled answer for every question to save time marking. Ready to pick up and use! These can be used in a multitude of ways-as lesson starters or ple...
Reasoning and Problem Solving Area of a Triangle 3 Reasoning and Problem Solving Area of a Triangle 3 Developing 1a. Eva is correct. 9cm x 4cm = 36cm2; 36cm2 ÷ 2 = 18cm2. 2a. 72cm 2; 9cm x 8cm ÷ 2 = 36cm x 2 = 72cm2. 3a. 6cm x 4cm; 12cm x 2cm; 8cm x 3cm. Expected 4a. Amy is incorrect. She has multiplied the base by the height but has forgotten to
KS2 Maths (Problem Solving) These topic-focused SATs questions at the end of a unit will help to test and extend students' understanding as well as helping them to prepare for SATs next year. These questions have fully-worked solutions which can be displayed on a whiteboard making feedback with students more efficient.
Problem Solving. This feature is somewhat larger than our usual features, but that is because it is packed with resources to help you develop a problem-solving approach to the teaching and learning of mathematics. Read Lynne's article which discusses the place of problem solving in the new curriculum and sets the scene.
Age range: 11-14. Resource type: Worksheet/Activity. File previews. pdf, 424.8 KB. pdf, 353.5 KB. Maths problem solving booklets covering a wide range of mathematical problems designed to improve problem solving strategies as well as numeracy and mathematical ability. Designed to be printed as A5 booklets.
The KS2 Reasoning paper will ask questions about angles, transforming shapes, finding the mean, median, mode and range of a data set, as well as testing your ability to solve maths problems.
302 Found. nginx
KS2 SATS QUESTIONS. These topic-focused booklets of SATs questions have fully-worked solutions which can be displayed on a whiteboard to make feedback with students more efficient. As well as helping to prepare for KS2 tests, these questions can be used at the end of a unit to help test and extend students' understanding of each topic.
Age 7 to 11. Challenge Level. After training hard, these two children have improved their results. Can you work out the length or height of their first jumps? ou may also be interested in this from the STEM Learning website, that complement the NRICH activities above. This collection of activities for KS2 children focuses on ratio and proportion.
pptx, 2.35 MB. pdf, 3.51 MB. These booklets each contain over 40 reasoning and problem solving questions suitable for KS1, KS2 and KS3 classes. These are the questions that we have been putting out each day in March 2016 on Twitter in the run up to SATS. The answers are provided with some simple notes at the back of the booklet and for some ...
There are two identical right angle triangles on the coordinate grid. What are the coordinates for point A? (1, 0) (1, 4) (1, 8) Q5. The pink line has been drawn one third of the way along the x axis. The blue line has been drawn half way up the y axis. What are the coordinates of the point at which the lines intersect?