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Developing Mathematical Thinking To make parents aware of the mastery approach in mathematics To explore how mathematical thinking is being developed in.

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Presentation on theme: "Developing Mathematical Thinking To make parents aware of the mastery approach in mathematics To explore how mathematical thinking is being developed in."— Presentation transcript:

1 Developing Mathematical Thinking To make parents aware of the mastery approach in mathematics To explore how mathematical thinking is being developed in Mawsley Primary To explore the content of SAT style questions To supply practical resources to support mathematical thinking at home

2 Hierarchy of thinking  1. Memory: The student recalls or memorises information 2. Translation: The student changes information into a different symbolic form 3. Interpretation: The student discovers relationships among facts, generalisations, definitions, and skills 4. Application: The student solves a life-like problem that requires identification of the issue and selection and use of appropriate generalisations and skills 5. Analysis: The student solves a problem in the light of conscious knowledge of the parts of the form of thinking. 6. Synthesis: The student solves a problem that requires original, creative thinking 7. Evaluation: The student makes a judgement of the methods they have used.

3 The National Curriculum for mathematics aims to ensure that all pupils:  become fluent in the fundamentals of mathematics, including through varied and frequent practice with increasingly complex problems over time, so that pupils develop conceptual understanding and the ability to recall and apply knowledge rapidly and accurately  reason mathematically by following a line of enquiry, conjecturing relationships and generalisations, and developing an argument, justification or proof using mathematical language  can solve problems by applying their mathematics to a variety of routine and non-routine problems with increasing sophistication, including breaking down problems into a series of simpler steps and persevering in seeking solutions.

4 Characteristics of Mawsley’s Mastery curriculum  An expectation that all pupils can and will achieve.  The large majority of pupils progress through the curriculum content at the same pace. Differentiation emphasises deep knowledge and individual support/intervention.  Teaching is underpinned by methodical curriculum design, with units of work that focus in depth on key topics. Lessons and resources are crafted carefully to foster deep conceptual and procedural knowledge.  Practice and consolidation play a central role. Well-designed variation builds fluency and understanding of underlying mathematical concepts in tandem.  Teachers use precise questioning to check conceptual and procedural knowledge. They assess in lessons to identify who requires intervention so that all pupils keep up.

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6 Summary of the Mawsley Mastery Approach  Introduce a new concept based on previous learning using concrete objects  Explore representations and real life contexts  Explore structures of concept using multiple representations (move from concrete to pictorial)  Apply concept to multiple contexts within other areas of mathematics  Drill and practise learning in a variety of contexts (abstract) until concept is ‘over learnt’  Prepare links for next concept building on idea that mathematics is an interrelated subject  Children and teachers review what learning has taken place and what most aided learning

7 Key stage 1 sat questions

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9 Key Stage 2 SAT questions

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11 Questions for developing thinking  What is the same and different about these 2 shapes?

12 What is the same and different about these 2 organisms?

13 What is the same and different about these 2 sentences?  The old man, who had recently been released from hospital, tottered infirmly down the road.  Although Tom was usually full of energy, he decided not to go to training that night and instead caught the bus to the cinema.

14 Questions to develop Mathematical thinking in addition and subtraction  Hard and easy questions  Which questions are easy / hard?  23 + 10 =  93 + 10 =  54 + 9 =  54 + 1 =  Explain why you think the hard questions are hard?

15  Hard and easy questions  Which questions are easy / hard?  323 + 10 =  393 + 10 =  454 - 100 =  954 - 120 =  Explain why you think the hard questions are hard?

16  Hard and easy questions  Which questions are easy / hard?  13323 - 70 =  12893 + 300 =  19354 - 500 =  19954 + 100 =  Explain why you think the hard questions are hard?

17  Hard and easy questions  Which questions are easy / hard?  213323 - 70 =  512893 + 300 =  819354 - 500 =  319954 + 100 =   Explain why you think the hard questions are hard?

18  Hard and easy questions  Which questions are easy / hard?   213323 - 70 =  512893 + 37 =  8193.54 - 5.9 =  Explain why you think the hard questions are hard?

19 Is it true that?  Is it true that 3+4 = 4 + 3?

20 Always, sometimes, never  Is it always, sometimes or never true that if you add three numbers less than 10 the answer will be an odd number

21  Always, sometimes, never  Is it always, sometimes or never true that if you subtract a multiple of 10 from any number the units digit of that number stays the same.  Is it always, sometimes or never true that when you add two numbers together you will get an even number

22  Always, sometimes, never  Is it always sometimes or never true that the difference between two odd numbers is odd

23  Always, sometimes, never  Is it always, sometimes or never true that the sum of four even numbers is divisible by 4.

24  Always, sometimes, never  Is it always, sometimes or never true that the sum of two consecutive triangular numbers is a square number

25 Thinking questions  The rationale behind the use of thinking questions is that their use encourages the children to vocalise their thoughts and provide reasons for their observations and conclusions about varying mathematical concepts. The questions provide opportunities for assessment of understanding without the pressure of giving a ‘right answer.’ Children should be confident that ‘All contributions’ will be valued.  Give me an example of… and another… and another  Numbers with a difference of 9  A hexagon with one line of symmetry  Three numbers with a mean of 7  Hard and easy  A fraction equivalent to 2/3  A shape with a perimeter of 15cm  A pie chart

26  The same and different  30%, 3/10  (2,3) (3,2)  Bar chart, line graph  Odd one out  3, 4, 9  Rhombus, kite, rectangle  Vote, survey, questionnaire

27  Additional conditions  A number less than 10 and more than 5  A 3d shape that can be rolled…has one flat face  5 numbers with a mean of 6…I of which must be 2  Always, sometimes, never  Doubling will make a number bigger  A square is bigger than a triangle  You can sort a set of 5 objects into 2 sets

28  Sorting  1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8  Drawings of quadrilaterals  Sorting data  Equivalent statements  Give a statement that is equivalent to 4 is less than 9  Show me that a litre is the same as two 500ml  Show that the mean of 4 and 5 is the same as the mean of 2.3.4.5.6

29  Lists  Pairs of numbers that subtract to give 3  Triangles with a right angle  All the different ways of sorting a set of animals  Ordering  Order these numbers by how close they are to 10  Order these rectangles according to their perimeter  Order groups of numbers according to their means  Find the correct solution  38+12 40 10 50 59  Perimeter for a 3 by 8 rectangle 24 22 32 12  Point on a line graph

30  Agree or disagree  I always get a number bigger than 7 if I add a number to 7  I have drawn a cube so a cube must be a 2d shape  A pie chart is a better way of showing data than a bar chart  Tell me more  6x3=18  This triangle is an isosceles  This chart shows me how the class travelled to school today

31 Questions and feedback


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