Top Banner
Numeracy across the Primary Curriculum
43

Numeracy across the Primary Curriculum. PE Page=homepage.

Jan 12, 2016

Download

Documents

Alan Phillips
Welcome message from author
This document is posted to help you gain knowledge. Please leave a comment to let me know what you think about it! Share it to your friends and learn new things together.
Transcript
Page 1: Numeracy across the Primary Curriculum. PE  Page=homepage.

Numeracy across the Primary Curriculum

Page 2: Numeracy across the Primary Curriculum. PE  Page=homepage.

PE

Page 3: Numeracy across the Primary Curriculum. PE  Page=homepage.
Page 4: Numeracy across the Primary Curriculum. PE  Page=homepage.

http://www.premierleague.com/fapl.rac?command=forwardOnly&nextPage=homepage

Page 5: Numeracy across the Primary Curriculum. PE  Page=homepage.

RE

Page 6: Numeracy across the Primary Curriculum. PE  Page=homepage.

CubitApproximately equal to the length of a person's forearm, i.e. the part of the arm from the elbow to the fingers.

Page 7: Numeracy across the Primary Curriculum. PE  Page=homepage.

Accuracy

1 cubit = 45.72 centimeters

The Romans used a cubit equal to 17.4 modern inches; the Egyptians used one of 20.64 inches.

Although the precise length of the Biblical cubit is unknown today, it's estimated to have been approximately 17½ to 20½ inches, with Scriptural references to both a "common" cubit and a "long" cubit.

Page 8: Numeracy across the Primary Curriculum. PE  Page=homepage.

Goliath

“And there went out a champion out of the camp of the Philistines, named Goliath, of Gath, whose height was six cubits and a span.” 1 Samuel 17:3-5 (King James Version)

Page 9: Numeracy across the Primary Curriculum. PE  Page=homepage.

Noah’s Ark

“The length of the ark [shall be] three hundred cubits, the breadth of it fifty cubits, and the height of it thirty cubits.” Genesis 6:15 (King James Version)

Page 10: Numeracy across the Primary Curriculum. PE  Page=homepage.

Science

Page 11: Numeracy across the Primary Curriculum. PE  Page=homepage.

Maths in Nature

http://www.abc.net.au/science/photos/mathsinnature/photo2.htm

Page 12: Numeracy across the Primary Curriculum. PE  Page=homepage.

Achillea PtarmicaSuppose that when a plant puts out a new shoot, that shoot has to grow two months before it is strong enough to support branching. If it branches every month after that at the growing point, we get the picture shown here.

http://www.mcs.surrey.ac.uk/Personal/R.Knott/Fibonacci/fibnat.html#spiral

Page 16: Numeracy across the Primary Curriculum. PE  Page=homepage.
Page 19: Numeracy across the Primary Curriculum. PE  Page=homepage.

Out & About

Page 20: Numeracy across the Primary Curriculum. PE  Page=homepage.
Page 21: Numeracy across the Primary Curriculum. PE  Page=homepage.

Treasure Hunt

Five items, together weighing exactly a kilogram

A perfectly symmetric leaf

An item with rotational symmetry

Two congruent shapes

Two similar shapes

An example of a spiralA twig exactly 12 inches

long

A regular solid

Page 22: Numeracy across the Primary Curriculum. PE  Page=homepage.
Page 23: Numeracy across the Primary Curriculum. PE  Page=homepage.
Page 24: Numeracy across the Primary Curriculum. PE  Page=homepage.
Page 25: Numeracy across the Primary Curriculum. PE  Page=homepage.
Page 26: Numeracy across the Primary Curriculum. PE  Page=homepage.
Page 27: Numeracy across the Primary Curriculum. PE  Page=homepage.
Page 28: Numeracy across the Primary Curriculum. PE  Page=homepage.

http://www.counton.org/pi/

Page 29: Numeracy across the Primary Curriculum. PE  Page=homepage.

http://www.zompist.com/numbers.shtml Numbers in 5000 languages

Page 30: Numeracy across the Primary Curriculum. PE  Page=homepage.

Less than, more than, same as …

                                                    

Page 31: Numeracy across the Primary Curriculum. PE  Page=homepage.

Ourselves

Page 32: Numeracy across the Primary Curriculum. PE  Page=homepage.
Page 33: Numeracy across the Primary Curriculum. PE  Page=homepage.

What can your pupils do for exactly one minute?

•Balance on one leg?

•Stare without blinking?

•Count the seconds in their head?

•What else can they do in one minute?

One-minute challenge

Page 34: Numeracy across the Primary Curriculum. PE  Page=homepage.
Page 35: Numeracy across the Primary Curriculum. PE  Page=homepage.

Issues?

Page 36: Numeracy across the Primary Curriculum. PE  Page=homepage.

45 ÷ 6 : Easy!

45 sweets are to be shared between 6 pupils. How many sweets will each pupil receive & how many will be left over?

7 sweets each with 3 left over

How many games of rounders, each lasting 6 minutes, can be played during a 45 minute P.E. lesson? 7

Page 37: Numeracy across the Primary Curriculum. PE  Page=homepage.

45 ÷ 6 : Still Easy

A relay team do a sponsored run of 45 miles. There are 6 athletes in the team. How far must each of them run?

71/2 miles

Page 38: Numeracy across the Primary Curriculum. PE  Page=homepage.

45 ÷ 6 : Still Easy!

£45 is to be shared between 6 pupils. How much will each pupil receive?

£7.50

A piece of string 45cm long is to be cut into 6 equal pieces. What will be the length of each piece?

7.5 cm

Page 39: Numeracy across the Primary Curriculum. PE  Page=homepage.

45 ÷ 6 : Still Easy?

45 pupils are going on a school trip. Each minibus can carry 6 pupils. How many minibuses are needed?

8 minibuses

Page 40: Numeracy across the Primary Curriculum. PE  Page=homepage.

Proportional change

x 95 miles 8km

Convert 45 miles into km

x 945 miles

72 km

Page 41: Numeracy across the Primary Curriculum. PE  Page=homepage.

“What else do I know?”

5miles

=

8km

10miles

=

16km

50miles

=

80km

15miles

=

24km

25miles

=

40km

75miles

=

120km

150miles

=

240km

Page 42: Numeracy across the Primary Curriculum. PE  Page=homepage.

100% = 80 50% = 40

25% = 20 10% = 8

5% = 4

75% = 60

1% = 0.8 40% = 32

2% = 1.6 20% = 16

“What else do I know?”

Page 43: Numeracy across the Primary Curriculum. PE  Page=homepage.

Whole-school practice?• Agreed approaches to calculation

• School policy on calculator use

• Agreed mathematical vocabulary and notation

• Lists of units used for measurement

• Agreed methods for drawing and labelling graphs, charts and diagrams

• Links with using and applying mathematics – reasoning, communicating, investigating and problem solving