Filter by: Content type: ALL Problems Articles Games Stage: All Stage 1&2 Stage 2&3 Stage 3&4 Stage 4&5 Challenge level:
In this problem you will do your own poll to find out whether your friends think two squares on a board are the same colour or not.
Do you know which birds are regular visitors where you live?
Have a look at this table of how children travel to school. How does it compare with children in your class?
Investigate how avalanches occur and how they can be controlled
Written for teachers, this article discusses mathematical representations and takes, in the second part of the article, examples of reception children's own representations.
What statements can you make about the car that passes the school gates at 11am on Monday? How will you come up with statements and test your ideas?
What can you say about the child who will be first on the playground tomorrow morning at breaktime in your school?
How does the time of dawn and dusk vary? What about the Moon, how does that change from night to night? Is the Sun always the same? Gather data to help you explore these questions.
This activity asks you to collect information about the birds you see in the garden. Are there patterns in the data or do the birds seem to visit randomly?
The class were playing a maths game using interlocking cubes. Can you help them record what happened?
Use the interactivity to help get a feel for this problem and to find out all the possible ways the balls could land.
95% of people in Britain should live within 10 miles of the route of the Olympic Torch tour. Is this true?
Terry and Ali are playing a game with three balls. Is it fair that Terry wins when the middle ball is red?