17 February 2026

5 Maths Gems #196

Welcome to my 196th gems post. This is where I share some of the latest news, ideas and resources for maths teachers.

1. Make it Full Marks
@acutelearning shared a great resource called 'Aiming for A*: Make it full marks'. This is an A level resource made using AQA papers but is relevant for other exam boards too. 

In this resource students are presented with partially correct answers. Each answer is worth some or most of the marks. However, in each case there's at least one error or missing component that means the answer will not receive full marks. Students have to find the error and correct the answer to make it full marks. This is a lovely revision resource to use in a summer term lesson with A level mathematicians. 


You can access the resource here and the answers are here


@acutelearning has also shared some other useful resources:

2. Mr Hardy Maths
@jim-hardy has shared his website mrhardymaths.co.uk which contains question banks for GCSE, A Level and A Level Further Maths. There's a search box to help you find relevant questions:


Opening one of the topics let you practice this skill on screen with students:


Clicking print gives you a worksheet with answers:


3. Graphiti
Maths teacher Neil Kendall has developed a free resource Graphiti to easily demonstrate calculus concepts graphically. As well as functioning like Desmos you can very easily use interactive tangents and normals, calculate definite integrals, illustrate area between two curves and show numerical integration interactively - switching between trapezium, Simpsons and mid-ordinate methods. It will work with cartesian (implicit and explicit) as well as polar and parametric equations. It works on desktop, mobile and tablet devices.

Here's a short video demonstrating many of its features:


4. Mr Chapman Maths
@dalechapman has shared a number of new features on his website mrchapmanmaths.com. He's made Large Data Set Flashcards for the Edexcel Large Data Set. This is a fantastic revision resource for students studying Edexcel A level maths.


There's also a fun game called Target 1000. You randomly generate a digit and place it in the column addition with a target of 1000. Have a go!

There are also a lot of resources on this website for teaching Decision Maths.

5. Dr Austin Resources
@draustinmaths continues to share fantastic new resources. Recent additions include Hyperbolic Functions for Further Maths, Exponentials and Logs and 3D Vectors for A Level Maths, and Volume and Surface Area of Compound Shapes.



Update
Calculators
I've enjoyed playing with the new Casio Classwiz+ which is a massive improvement on the previous model. The brilliant company Science Studio very kindly sent me both a 85 and 991, engraved with my name, and Casio sent me one too. What lovely people. I've been using my old White 991EX since 2016 and my dependence on the SD button has made me reluctant to transition to the 991CW. But now I have a 991CW+ I've finally stopped using the old white model. The 991CW+ is my new first choice calculator. 

MathsPad
Have you seen the latest update from MathsPad? As well as new resources in their 'Building Blocks' series, which are aimed at students with big gaps in foundational knowledge, they've also started a new collection of cover resources. These are free to access. Also, Nicola has written a useful explanation of the logistics of using booklets in lessons.


Exercise Books
A teacher on Bluesky asked a question about treasury tagging books and I made a quick video for her (I recorded it in a rush before school, so it's not the best thing I've made! Please don't judge...!). In this video I show the layout of our A4+ exercise books and the way we set up our treasury tags. I know a lot of teachers complain that their exercise books are a mess so you might be interested in what we do. 


Conferences
You may have seen that mathsconf40 has been announced for Saturday 18th April. This is a first - mathsconfs have always taken place in March, June and October. A mathsconf at the start of the summer term has taken me by surprise. It's great to see that these conferences are still running. It looks like some people will be staying at the Premier Inn Derby South but for some reason that's £111 for a room so I'm not quite sure what to do about that - it takes the cost to well over £200 for train fare and hotels. I remember when I used to spend £40 on conference hotel rooms! Those were the days.

The MEI Conference is now taking bookings. This takes place in term time (Thursday 2nd - Friday 3rd July) but it's after exams when lots of teachers have gained time so hopefully doesn't involve missing too many lessons. I recommend asking your school to fund your attendance at this - there's no harm in asking! Schools often have untapped CPD budgets. It's a brilliant conference that I highly recommend. 

I attended an Inset Day last week where I went to three excellent sessions: a workshop on the CG100 which was delivered by Simon May from Casio, a workshop on A level marking delivered by Isobel Oakley from Pearson, and a workshop on university admissions tests delivered by Alexandra Hewitt from MEI. I've been to so many conference in the last twelve years it's sometimes hard for me to find sessions that are relevant and useful that I haven't been to before, but on this occasion all three workshops were genuinely helpful. Alexandra said something in her session that really struck me - she talked about who we should encourage to do maths degrees and it occurred to me that I only think of maths degrees as being suitable for the very best mathematicians. But a student could be on a Grade B or C in A level maths and it's their strongest or favourite subject, and maybe one day they'd make an excellent maths teacher. These are the students that I should be encouraging to take a maths degree. I don't do enough of this. This gave me something to think about.

Here's a photo of part of my team on the way home from our post-conference drinks. There were eight of us earlier in the day but we forgot to take a picture. I love my team - a group of absolute legends who support each other every day and work incredibly hard to make sure every child succeeds. 



I wish all of my readers a restful half term break.



10 comments:

  1. Please could you link which hole punchers you buy? I know you said they break often but at least it’s better than nothing! Thank you :-)

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  2. We get a Rapseco P1100 or P2200 https://rapesco.com/product-category/punching/ - I don't particularly recommend it but I don't know of anything better! We empty the punches after every use - which is a hassle - but they still break. And the replacement parts are rubbish. We go through one or two hole punches a year! Worth noting that this one is currently only £42 on Prime which means it's actually a decent price https://www.amazon.co.uk/dp/B000J6BPB8?th=1

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  3. K-Dog of Beckfoot’s school is a legend!

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  4. K-Dog(aka Neil Kendall) is a legend.

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  5. Thank you for another useful GEM. Your exercise books look great! Do your students take the books home after each lesson? Do you use the same tests each year, and if so, do you get a problem with students trying to get hold of tests from older students?

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    1. At KS3 and KS4, they are allowed to take their book home if they want (and some do when they have a test coming up etc), but most students leave them in a cupboard at the back of the classroom. I prefer this. Stops them getting tatty in their bags. And lightens the load for students (we don't have lockers). And stops students forgetting to bring their book in. Homework is set on Sparx so they don't need their books for homework.

      Snapshots - sometimes we might re-use tests from previous years, but these are not high stakes enough for students to go looking for so we've never had a problem with this. They differ by class anyway, and teachers tweak them quite a lot (curriculum/term date changes means things look slightly different every year), so I'd be surprised if a student was able to locate the same test! However we do change our formal mid and end year assessments every year. I enjoy writing these (a big job but I like doing it!). This is partly to stop students getting hold of the papers, but also so we are able to provide students with previous assessments for revision.

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  6. Thank for another useful Maths Gem blog. Your exercise books look great! Do your students take their home after each lesson?

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. At KS3 and KS4, they are allowed to take their book home if they want (and some do when they have a test coming up etc), but most students leave them in a cupboard at the back of the classroom. I prefer this. Stops them getting tatty in their bags. And lightens the load for students (we don't have lockers). And stops students forgetting to bring their book in. Homework is set on Sparx so they don't need their books for homework.

      This differs at KS5 - students do a lot of work in their exercise book outside of lessons so they keep their books.

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  7. Thanks for this Jo,
    Just with the exercise books what size squares do you use? Do you use the same throughout KS3/4 and 5?
    Also the snapshots/yellow tests do you have a blog on these and what they look like in more detail?
    Thanks again!

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    Replies
    1. Hi. We use the medium size squares (10mm) https://www.glsed.co.uk/product/fe00056442. They're not expected to write one digit per square or anything like that so I'm not bothered about square size really - I wouldn't mind if they had lined books. We use the exact same books in Key Stage 3, 4 and 5. I used to use folders at A level but much prefer using exercise books now.

      I don't have a blog on the snapshots. They're just standard end of unit tests. So topic specific skills questions, tailored to the class. There's normally a challenge question or two at the end, then two or three retrieval questions on previously taught topics. Snapshots are usually around 45 minutes and 45 marks. Hope that helps!

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