Or search by topic
Published 2014 Revised 2020
Imagine it's the start of a new term. You have new and enthusiastic classes and you are desperate to get them engaged with rich tasks straight away. The Factors and Multiples Puzzle is a great task for
small groups of students to work on. It requires recall of the properties of numbers, and plenty of mathematical reasoning. By listening in on students' discussions as they work, you can get a feel for what they know and what they might need to revise, as well as getting a sense of how well they can speak confidently about mathematical ideas and reason effectively.
When introducing new ideas to a class, rich tasks can offer the opportunity for students to build on existing knowledge. Perimeter Expressions requires understanding of
perimeter, and introduces students to the idea of collecting like terms in an intuitive way. Vector Journeys also taps into students' intuition, inviting them to draw squares and their diagonals and notice patterns in their vector representations. What's it
Worth? is an exercise in simultaneous equations, but the symbolic presentation is inviting, and allows students to approach solving equations as detective work, looking for elegant methods of eliminating variables. Once students have had an opportunity to engage with new concepts in an intuitive and playful way they are better able to make sense of formal mathematical
approaches.