Skip over navigation
Cambridge University Faculty of Mathematics NRich logo
menu search
  • Teachers expand_more
    • Early years
    • Primary
    • Secondary
    • Post-16
    • Events
    • Professional development
  • Students expand_more
    • Primary
    • Secondary
    • Post-16
  • Parents expand_more
    • Early Years
    • Primary
    • Secondary
    • Post-16
  • Problem-Solving Schools
  • About NRICH expand_more
    • About us
    • Impact stories
    • Support us
    • Our funders
    • Contact us
  • search

Or search by topic

Number and algebra

  • The Number System and Place Value
  • Calculations and Numerical Methods
  • Fractions, Decimals, Percentages, Ratio and Proportion
  • Properties of Numbers
  • Patterns, Sequences and Structure
  • Algebraic expressions, equations and formulae
  • Coordinates, Functions and Graphs

Geometry and measure

  • Angles, Polygons, and Geometrical Proof
  • 3D Geometry, Shape and Space
  • Measuring and calculating with units
  • Transformations and constructions
  • Pythagoras and Trigonometry
  • Vectors and Matrices

Probability and statistics

  • Handling, Processing and Representing Data
  • Probability

Working mathematically

  • Thinking mathematically
  • Developing positive attitudes
  • Cross-curricular contexts

Advanced mathematics

  • Decision Mathematics and Combinatorics
  • Advanced Probability and Statistics
  • Mechanics
  • Calculus

For younger learners

  • Early Years Foundation Stage

Reasoning, Justifying, Convincing and Proof

Reasoning, Justifying, Convincing and Proof is part of our Working Mathematically collection.

More Less Is MoreLive

Age 7 to 14
Challenge Level Yellow star

In each of these games, you will need a little bit of luck, and your knowledge of place value to develop a winning strategy.

Fruity Totals

Age 7 to 16
Challenge Level Yellow star

In this interactivity each fruit has a hidden value. Can you deduce what each one is worth?

5 by 5 Mathdokus

Age 7 to 16
Challenge Level Yellow star

Can you use the clues to complete these 5 by 5 Mathematical Sudokus?

Go Forth and Generalise

Age 11 to 14

Spotting patterns can be an important first step - explaining why it is appropriate to generalise is the next step, and often the most interesting and important.

Gabriel's Problem

Age 11 to 14
Challenge Level Yellow star

Gabriel multiplied together some numbers and then erased them. Can you figure out where each number was?

Number Pyramids

Age 11 to 14
Challenge Level Yellow star

Try entering different sets of numbers in the number pyramids. How does the total at the top change?

Calendar Capers

Age 11 to 14
Challenge Level Yellow star

Choose any three by three square of dates on a calendar page...

Diminishing Returns

Age 11 to 14
Challenge Level Yellow star

How much of the square is coloured blue? How will the pattern continue?

Largest Product

Age 11 to 14
Challenge Level Yellow star

Which set of numbers that add to 100 have the largest product?

What Numbers Can We Make?

Age 11 to 14
Challenge Level Yellow star

Imagine we have four bags containing a large number of 1s, 4s, 7s and 10s. What numbers can we make?

Sticky Numbers

Age 11 to 14
Challenge Level Yellow star

Can you arrange the numbers 1 to 17 in a row so that each adjacent pair adds up to a square number?

Tilted Squares

Age 11 to 14
Challenge Level Yellow star

It's easy to work out the areas of most squares that we meet, but what if they were tilted?

Summing Consecutive Numbers

Age 11 to 14
Challenge Level Yellow star

15 = 7 + 8 and 10 = 1 + 2 + 3 + 4. Can you say which numbers can be expressed as the sum of two or more consecutive integers?

Odds and Evens

Age 11 to 14
Challenge Level Yellow star

Are these games fair? How can you tell?

Elevenses

Age 11 to 14
Challenge Level Yellow star

How many pairs of numbers can you find that add up to a multiple of 11? Do you notice anything interesting about your results?

Magic Letters

Age 11 to 14
Challenge Level Yellow star

Charlie has made a Magic V. Can you use his example to make some more? And how about Magic Ls, Ns and Ws?

Route to Infinity

Age 11 to 14
Challenge Level Yellow starYellow star

Can you describe this route to infinity? Where will the arrows take you next?

Tower of Hanoi

Age 11 to 14
Challenge Level Yellow starYellow star

The Tower of Hanoi is an ancient mathematical challenge. Working on the building blocks may help you to explain the patterns you notice.

Power Mad!

Age 11 to 14
Challenge Level Yellow starYellow star

Powers of numbers behave in surprising ways. Take a look at some of these and try to explain why they are true.

Seven Squares

Age 11 to 14
Challenge Level Yellow starYellow star

Watch these videos to see how Phoebe, Alice and Luke chose to draw 7 squares. How would they draw 100?

More Number Pyramids

Age 11 to 14
Challenge Level Yellow starYellow star

When number pyramids have a sequence on the bottom layer, some interesting patterns emerge...

What Numbers Can We Make Now?

Age 11 to 14
Challenge Level Yellow starYellow star

Imagine we have four bags containing numbers from a sequence. What numbers can we make now?

1 Step 2 Step

Age 11 to 14
Challenge Level Yellow starYellow star

Liam's house has a staircase with 12 steps. He can go down the steps one at a time or two at time. In how many different ways can Liam go down the 12 steps?

Always a Multiple?

Age 11 to 14
Challenge Level Yellow starYellow star

Think of a two digit number, reverse the digits, and add the numbers together. Something special happens...

Seven Squares - Group-worthy Task

Age 11 to 14
Challenge Level Yellow starYellow star

Choose a couple of the sequences. Try to picture how to make the next, and the next, and the next... Can you describe your reasoning?

Legs Eleven

Age 11 to 14
Challenge Level Yellow starYellow star

Take any four digit number. Move the first digit to the end and move the rest along. Now add your two numbers. Did you get a multiple of 11?

Consecutive Negative Numbers

Age 11 to 14
Challenge Level Yellow starYellow starYellow star

Do you notice anything about the solutions when you add and/or subtract consecutive negative numbers?

Reasoning, Justifying, Convincing and Proof - Short Problems

Age 11 to 16

A collection of short Stage 3 and 4 problems on Reasoning, Justifying, Convincing and Proof.

What's it Worth?

Age 11 to 16
Challenge Level Yellow star

There are lots of different methods to find out what the shapes are worth - how many can you find?

Arithmagons

Age 11 to 16
Challenge Level Yellow star

Can you find the values at the vertices when you know the values on the edges?

Multiple Surprises

Age 11 to 16
Challenge Level Yellow star

Sequences of multiples keep cropping up...

Cyclic Quadrilaterals

Age 11 to 16
Challenge Level Yellow star

Draw some quadrilaterals on a 9-point circle and work out the angles. Is there a theorem?

Marbles in a Box

Age 11 to 16
Challenge Level Yellow starYellow star

How many winning lines can you make in a three-dimensional version of noughts and crosses?

Pythagoras Proofs

Age 11 to 16
Challenge Level Yellow starYellow star

Can you make sense of these three proofs of Pythagoras' Theorem?

Same Length

Age 11 to 16
Challenge Level Yellow starYellow star

Construct two equilateral triangles on a straight line. There are two lengths that look the same - can you prove it?

Take Three from Five

Age 11 to 16
Challenge Level Yellow starYellow star

Caroline and James pick sets of five numbers. Charlie tries to find three that add together to make a multiple of three. Can they stop him?

What Does it All Add up To?

Age 11 to 18
Challenge Level Yellow starYellow star

If you take four consecutive numbers and add them together, the answer will always be even. What else do you notice?

How Old Am I?

Age 14 to 16
Challenge Level Yellow star

In 15 years' time my age will be the square of my age 15 years ago. Can you work out my age, and when I had other special birthdays?

A Little Light Thinking

Age 14 to 16
Challenge Level Yellow star

Here is a machine with four coloured lights. Can you make two lights switch on at once? Three lights? All four lights?

Salinon

Age 14 to 16
Challenge Level Yellow star

This shape comprises four semi-circles. What is the relationship between the area of the shaded region and the area of the circle on AB as diameter?

Curvy Areas

Age 14 to 16
Challenge Level Yellow star

Have a go at creating these images based on circles. What do you notice about the areas of the different sections?

Factorising with Multilink

Age 14 to 16
Challenge Level Yellow star

Can you find out what is special about the dimensions of rectangles you can make with squares, sticks and units?

Attractive Tablecloths

Age 14 to 16
Challenge Level Yellow starYellow star

Charlie likes tablecloths that use as many colours as possible, but insists that his tablecloths have some symmetry. Can you work out how many colours he needs for different tablecloth designs?

Perfectly Square

Age 14 to 16
Challenge Level Yellow starYellow star

The sums of the squares of three related numbers is also a perfect square - can you explain why?

Picture Story

Age 14 to 16
Challenge Level Yellow starYellow star

Can you see how this picture illustrates the formula for the sum of the first six cube numbers?

What's Possible?

Age 14 to 16
Challenge Level Yellow starYellow star

Many numbers can be expressed as the difference of two perfect squares. What do you notice about the numbers you CANNOT make?

Multiplication Square

Age 14 to 16
Challenge Level Yellow starYellow star

Pick a square within a multiplication square and add the numbers on each diagonal. What do you notice?

Why 24?

Age 14 to 16
Challenge Level Yellow starYellow star

Take any prime number greater than 3 , square it and subtract one. Working on the building blocks will help you to explain what is special about your results.

Painted Cube

Age 14 to 16
Challenge Level Yellow starYellow star

Imagine a large cube made from small red cubes being dropped into a pot of yellow paint. How many of the small cubes will have yellow paint on their faces?

Angle Trisection

Age 14 to 16
Challenge Level Yellow starYellow starYellow star

It is impossible to trisect an angle using only ruler and compasses but it can be done using a carpenter's square.

Latin Numbers

Age 14 to 16
Challenge Level Yellow starYellow starYellow star

Can you create a Latin Square from multiples of a six digit number?

Quad in Quad

Age 14 to 18
Challenge Level Yellow starYellow star

Join the midpoints of a quadrilateral to get a new quadrilateral. What is special about it?

Kite in a Square

Age 14 to 18
Challenge Level Yellow starYellow star

Can you make sense of the three methods to work out what fraction of the total area is shaded?

Iff

Age 14 to 18
Challenge Level Yellow starYellow star

Take a triangular number, multiply it by 8 and add 1. What is special about your answer? Can you prove it?

Always Perfect

Age 14 to 18
Challenge Level Yellow starYellow star

Show that if you add 1 to the product of four consecutive numbers the answer is ALWAYS a perfect square.

Integration Matcher

Age 16 to 18
Challenge Level Yellow star

Can you match the charts of these functions to the charts of their integrals?

Direct Logic

Age 16 to 18
Challenge Level Yellow star

Can you work through these direct proofs, using our interactive proof sorters?

Areas and Ratios

Age 16 to 18
Challenge Level Yellow starYellow star

Do you have enough information to work out the area of the shaded quadrilateral?

Impossible Square?

Age 16 to 18
Challenge Level Yellow starYellow star

Can you make a square from these triangles?

Impossible Triangles?

Age 16 to 18
Challenge Level Yellow starYellow star

Which of these triangular jigsaws are impossible to finish?

Mind Your Ps and Qs

Age 16 to 18
Challenge Level Yellow starYellow star

Sort these mathematical propositions into a series of 8 correct statements.

Thousand Words

Age 16 to 18
Challenge Level Yellow starYellow starYellow star

Here the diagram says it all. Can you find the diagram?

  • Tech help
  • Accessibility Statement
  • Sign up to our newsletter
  • Twitter X logo

The NRICH Project aims to enrich the mathematical experiences of all learners. To support this aim, members of the NRICH team work in a wide range of capacities, including providing professional development for teachers wishing to embed rich mathematical tasks into everyday classroom practice.

NRICH is part of the family of activities in the Millennium Mathematics Project.

University of Cambridge logo NRICH logo