On the seventh day of christmas my true love sent to me … seven swans a flipping (through a magazine)!
Image credit: babyanimalzoo.com
Download it here: On the seventh day of Christmas
On the seventh day of christmas my true love sent to me … seven swans a flipping (through a magazine)!
Image credit: babyanimalzoo.com
Download it here: On the seventh day of Christmas
On the sixth day of Christmas my true love sent to me … teeny tiny little boots!
Image credit: ebay.com.au
Of course, most geese don’t wear boots these days, but before mass transportation geese were walked to market in little boots or with tar applied to their feet.
Download the poster here: On the sixth day of Christmas
There is a rather splendid video from 31st Dec 1966 on the BBC archive about walking geese to market: http://www.bbc.co.uk/archive/chronicle/8619.shtml
On the fourth day of Christmas Maths Sandpit gave to me … another odd problem.
Image credit: misskyliem.wordpress.com
Download the fourth poster here: On the fourth day of Christmas
Note: There is a minimum call solution (6) and a logical call solution (0 – birds can’t use phones)
On the third day of Christmas Maths Sandpit gave to me … French patisserie cake!
Download the third day here: On the third day of Christmas
Welcome to the second day of chrismaths!
Today we give you Doves…
(Image credit: Talismancoins.com)
Download the second day here:
On the second day of christmas
I’m not going tinsel crazy yet – I’m just giving you, the reader, a resource a bit early to allow for printing and planning. We have a big noticeboard in the Maths Dept and I thought that this year it would be nice to have a temporary Christmas display: Welcome to the ‘Twelve Days of Chrismaths’!
I will be uploading twelve vaguely christmas related, corny christmas posters, starting today. I’m going to put one up each weekday in school, from 2nd December onwards. You might want to make this into a competition and get students to submit solutions to all the puzzles. You might want to use them as a class activity in the last week of term. Whatever you choose to do, come back each day for the next puzzle.
In post 104 I mentioned a rather splendid traffic light percentages trail by Whidds (“Percentages shout out”). This week I decided to create my own traffic light trail.
How it works
Each card has three questions on it. Green is easy, amber is okay, red is challenging. Pupils write down the card number and which colour they are attempting. Pupils are free to choose the level of difficulty – however the teacher can direct them to harder/easier questions as appropriate.
My trail is about division:
Green = Division based on understanding of multiplication tables.
Amber = Short division, no remainders
Red = Same digits as amber, but with a decimal divided by an integer
Download the Division traffic light trail.
Running the activity
My cards are actually powerpoint slides. I started by showing the class the first question and explaining how to choose and answer. I printed out the question slides 2 per sheet of A4 to make roughly A5 cards.
Of course, there was a twist – I hid the cards around my room and in the corridor. A helpful (tall) sixth former had even stuck one on the ceiling for me! There was a real feeling of enthusiasm as the class searched for and answered the cards. One pupil finished the whole trail very quickly, so he was sent around again. I suggested amber questions, he went for red cards and was very successful.
You might decide to award points for level of difficulty for an additional level of competition.
At the end of the activity, I showed the final slide of the presentation: colour coded answers. They marked their own work.
Review
I was really pleased by the increased level of engagement throughout the class. And burning off some surplus energy didn’t do any harm either!