Filter by: Content type: ALL Problems Articles Games Stage: All Stage 1&2 Stage 2&3 Stage 3&4 Stage 4&5 Challenge level:
This project challenges you to work out the number of cubes hidden under a cloth. What questions would you like to ask?
Why does the tower look a different size in each of these pictures?
In this challenge, buckets come in five different sizes. If you choose some buckets, can you investigate the different ways in which they can be filled?
Explore Alex's number plumber. What questions would you like to ask? Don't forget to keep visiting NRICH projects site for the latest developments and questions.
Bernard Bagnall describes how to get more out of some favourite NRICH investigations.
This task depends on groups working collaboratively, discussing and reasoning to agree a final product.
An old game but lots of arithmetic!
In this challenge, you will work in a group to investigate circular fences enclosing trees that are planted in square or triangular arrangements.
One day five small animals in my garden were going to have a sports day. They decided to have a swimming race, a running race, a high jump and a long jump.
Explore this interactivity and see if you can work out what it does. Could you use it to estimate the area of a shape?
Guess the Dominoes for child and adult.
What can you see? What do you notice? What questions can you ask?
This task depends on learners sharing reasoning, listening to opinions, reflecting and pulling ideas together.
'What Shape?' activity for adult and child.
Arranging counters activity for adult and child.
This task requires learners to explain and help others, asking and answering questions.
Some questions and prompts to encourage discussion about what experiences you want to give your pupils to help them reach their full potential in mathematics.
Good questioning techniques have long being regarded as a fundamental tool of effective teachers. This article for teachers looks at different categories of questions that can promote mathematical. . . .
A collection of our favourite pictorial problems, one for each day of Advent.
Being stuck is usually thought of as being a negative state of affairs. We want our pupils to succeed, not to struggle. Or do we? This article discusses why being stuck can be fruitful.
In the process of working with some groups of teachers on using questions to promote mathematical thinking, the following table was developed. It provides examples of generic questions that can. . . .
In this article for teachers, Bernard gives an example of taking an initial activity and getting questions going that lead to other explorations.
In this article Liz Woodham reflects on just how much we really listen to learners’ own questions to determine the mathematical path of lessons.
You'll need to work in a group on this problem. Can you use your sticky notes to show the answer to questions such as 'how many boys and girls are there in your group?'.