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These Olympic quantities have been jumbled up! Can you put them back together again?
The triathlon is a physically gruelling challenge. Can you work out which athlete burnt the most calories?
Can you rank these sets of quantities in order, from smallest to largest? Can you provide convincing evidence for your rankings?
Can you deduce which Olympic athletics events are represented by the graphs?
Can you sketch graphs to show how the height of water changes in different containers as they are filled?
Which countries have the most naturally athletic populations?
Invent a scoring system for a 'guess the weight' competition.
Imagine different shaped vessels being filled. Can you work out what the graphs of the water level should look like?
Is there a temperature at which Celsius and Fahrenheit readings are the same?
In this article, Becky Moseley outlines key considerations for Primary teachers wanting to create a maths trail in their own locality.
Is it cheaper to cook a meal from scratch or to buy a ready meal? What difference does the number of people you're cooking for make?
What shapes should Elly cut out to make a witch's hat? How can she make a taller hat?
What shape would fit your pens and pencils best? How can you make it?
Formulate and investigate a simple mathematical model for the design of a table mat.
Make your own pinhole camera for safe observation of the sun, and find out how it works.
If I don't have the size of cake tin specified in my recipe, will the size I do have be OK?
Can you visualise whether these nets fold up into 3D shapes? Watch the videos each time to see if you were correct.
Two trains set off at the same time from each end of a single straight railway line. A very fast bee starts off in front of the first train and flies continuously back and forth between the two trains. How far does Sidney fly before he is squashed between the two trains?