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Mr Barton Maths

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Free maths resources from me, Craig Barton. I am the creator of mrbartonmaths.com & diagnosticquestions.com. I am also the TES Maths Adviser and the host of the Mr Barton Maths Podcast.

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Free maths resources from me, Craig Barton. I am the creator of mrbartonmaths.com & diagnosticquestions.com. I am also the TES Maths Adviser and the host of the Mr Barton Maths Podcast.
Something in Common 7: Trapezium and Diagonals
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Something in Common 7: Trapezium and Diagonals

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Earliest recommended Year group: Year 9. Work out the area of two triangles given the area of two others which all fit in a trapezium. Each problem is different but all the answers are the same. This is from the “Something in Common” collection of resources by John Burke. They allow consolidation of key skills, prevent students from copying each other (as all the questions are different), make marking and assessing easy for the teacher (as all the answers are the same!), and provide a lovely extra challenge for students as they try to figure out exactly what is going on! To access the full collection, and read John’s background notes, please visit: http://www.mrbartonmaths.com/common.htm
Something in Common 8: Four Crescents
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Something in Common 8: Four Crescents

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Earliest recommended Year group: Year 11. Four crescents are drawn around a rectangle. All rectangles are different and the area of the crescents is equal to the rectangle. Surd (area = 1) and non-surd (area = 900) versions available. This is from the “Something in Common” collection of resources by John Burke. They allow consolidation of key skills, prevent students from copying each other (as all the questions are different), make marking and assessing easy for the teacher (as all the answers are the same!), and provide a lovely extra challenge for students as they try to figure out exactly what is going on! To access the full collection, and read John’s background notes, please visit: http://www.mrbartonmaths.com/common.htm
Something in Common 30: Parabola in Parallelogram
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Something in Common 30: Parabola in Parallelogram

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Earliest recommended Year group: Year 12. Given certain facts about a parabola the pupils have to determine its equation. Then they need to integrate the function to work out ratios of areas. There is a neat solution that makes it very easy to do - which you can show them at the end. A further extension is to challenge them to do it without integration. This is from the “Something in Common” collection of resources by John Burke. They allow consolidation of key skills, prevent students from copying each other (as all the questions are different), make marking and assessing easy for the teacher (as all the answers are the same!), and provide a lovely extra challenge for students as they try to figure out exactly what is going on! To access the full collection, and read John’s background notes, please visit: http://www.mrbartonmaths.com/common.htm
Something in Common 19: Cubic, Tangent, Circle
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Something in Common 19: Cubic, Tangent, Circle

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Earliest recommended Year group: Year 12. Pupils need to work out the equation of a cubic and draw a tangent at a specific place. All tangents should go through the first root. This is from the “Something in Common” collection of resources by John Burke. They allow consolidation of key skills, prevent students from copying each other (as all the questions are different), make marking and assessing easy for the teacher (as all the answers are the same!), and provide a lovely extra challenge for students as they try to figure out exactly what is going on! To access the full collection, and read John’s background notes, please visit: http://www.mrbartonmaths.com/common.htm
Autograph Activity - Euclid: Angles in a Triangle
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Autograph Activity - Euclid: Angles in a Triangle

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An Autograph Player activity where students can investigate a dynamic illustration of one of Euclid's Elements. You can use this activity on the interactive whiteboard, or for your students to investigate on their own. Autograph does not need to be installed to use this activity (so your students can even use it at home), but you will need to install the free Autograph Player add-on (instructions given after clicking the link). For a full list of Autograph Activities, please click on the other web-link.
Autograph Video 56 - Follow the Point!
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Autograph Video 56 - Follow the Point!

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The 56th in Mr Barton's Autograph Video tutorial series. The Transformation of Functions Trilogy comes to a close with this final video all about how you can use Autograph to play “Follow the Point”. Being able to predict the co-ordinate of a point following a transformation is increasingly becoming a popular exam style question, and is a really useful skill for the students to develop, and it can be examined thoroughly using Autograph’s dynamic features. Clicking on the web-link you can see all the videos in this series.
Autograph Activity - Angle Facts
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Autograph Activity - Angle Facts

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An Autograph Player activity to investigate all the main angle facts, including those with parallel lines. You can use this activity on the interactive whiteboard, or for your students to investigate on their own. Autograph does not need to be installed to use this activity (so your students can even use it at home), but you will need to install the free Autograph Player add-on (instructions given after clicking the link). For a full list of Autograph Activities, please click on the other web-link.
Autograph Video 70 - Trigonometry & Pythag 3
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Autograph Video 70 - Trigonometry & Pythag 3

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All good things must come to an end, and the same is also true for our Autograph Trigonometric Trilogy! In this final video we go out with a bang by taking a look at how we can use Autograph to test students’ understanding of the classic isosceles triangle questions that seem to be a favourite of the examiners. Can students use their knowledge of sin, cos and tan in right-angled triangles to solve these problems?
Autograph Activity - Matrix Transformations
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Autograph Activity - Matrix Transformations

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An Autograph Player activity designed to help investigate the transformation of matrices. You can use this activity on the interactive whiteboard, or for your students to investigate on their own. Autograph does not need to be installed to use this activity (so your students can even use it at home), but you will need to install the free Autograph Player add-on (instructions given after clicking the link). For a full list of Autograph Activities, please click on the other web-link.
Autograph Activity - a Cube in 3D
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Autograph Activity - a Cube in 3D

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A cube in 3D. This could be used to introduce 3D Pythagoras or trigonometry. You can use this activity on the interactive whiteboard, or for your students to investigate on their own. Autograph does not need to be installed to use this activity (so your students can even use it at home), but you will need to install the free Autograph Player add-on (instructions given after clicking the link). For a full list of Autograph Activities, please click on the other web-link.
Autograph Video 65 - Leap Frog Puzzle
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Autograph Video 65 - Leap Frog Puzzle

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The 65th in Mr Barton's Autograph Video tutorial series. The first of the Autograph Puzzle Trilogy! Here we look at a lovely pencil and paper puzzle inspired by Don Steward’s amazing Median Maths Blog. Place any 3 points on a page and start leap-frogging over them. After a few leaps, do you notice anything? More importantly, can you explain/prove it? We look at how Autograph may be able to help us get to grips with what is going on. Click on the link to see all my Autograph videos
Autograph Video 68 - Trigonometry & Pythag 1
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Autograph Video 68 - Trigonometry & Pythag 1

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The first of the Trigonometric Trilogy! In this week’s video we take a look at a clever way of using Autograph to practice working out the length of missing sides using Trigonometry (sin, cos and tan) and Pythagoras. We begin by constructing a right-angled triangle, and then use a sneaky technique to cover up a measurement. The finished article can then be used in class or at home for infinite trigonometry practice! More on this next week!
Autograph Tutorial 2 - Straight Lines & Quadratics
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Autograph Tutorial 2 - Straight Lines & Quadratics

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Douglas Butler, the creator of Autograph, has produced 7 high quality tutorial videos to help you get the most out of the software. This tutorial video looks at using Autograph to introduce the straight line and its gradient (slope), and the quadratic and its various transformations. Also available on TES are my own weekly set of Autograph videos, and lots of Autograph Player Activities that don’t even require Autograph to be installed!
Autograph Tutorial 7 - On-Screen Keyboard
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Autograph Tutorial 7 - On-Screen Keyboard

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Douglas Butler, the creator of Autograph, has produced 7 high quality tutorial videos to help you get the most out of the software. In this tutorial we have a look at Autograph's uniquely useful onscreen keyboard: for controlling Autograph, entering mathematical notation and changing languages. Also available on TES are my own weekly set of Autograph videos, and lots of Autograph Player Activities that don’t even require Autograph to be installed!
Autograph Activity - A Quadratic Relationship
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Autograph Activity - A Quadratic Relationship

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A free online Autograph Player activity that challenges students to investigate a very interesting property of quadratic curves. Can your students prove this? You can use this activity on the interactive whiteboard, or for your students to investigate on their own. Autograph does not need to be installed to use this activity (so your students can even use it at home), but you will need to install the free Autograph Player add-on (instructions given after clicking the link). For a full list of Autograph Activities, please click on the other web-link.
Autograph Activity - Rules of Differentiation
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Autograph Activity - Rules of Differentiation

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A free online Autograph Player activity that allows students to discover the rules for finding the gradient function of quadratic equations. You can use this activity on the interactive whiteboard, or for your students to investigate on their own. Autograph does not need to be installed to use this activity (so your students can even use it at home), but you will need to install the free Autograph Player add-on (instructions given after clicking the link). For a full list of Autograph Activities, please click on the other web-link.
Something in Common 29: Volume of a Tetrahedron
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Something in Common 29: Volume of a Tetrahedron

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Earliest recommended Year group: Year 13. Given the 3D coordinates of four points what is the volume of the tetrahedron that is formed by joining them with line segments? This brings together just about everything they need to know about vectors and so is a good revision task. Using the triple product to solve it takes some of the fun out (hence suitable up to C4). Of course, the volumes are all the same.... but why? This is from the “Something in Common” collection of resources by John Burke. They allow consolidation of key skills, prevent students from copying each other (as all the questions are different), make marking and assessing easy for the teacher (as all the answers are the same!), and provide a lovely extra challenge for students as they try to figure out exactly what is going on! To access the full collection, and read John’s background notes, please visit: http://www.mrbartonmaths.com/common.htm
Something in Common 12: Quad Tessellate
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Something in Common 12: Quad Tessellate

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Earliest recommended Year group: Year 7. Get pupils to draw a quadrilateral that they think will not tessellate. Then reproduce it using the Geogebra file and show that it does. Then show a picture proof. This is from the “Something in Common” collection of resources by John Burke. They allow consolidation of key skills, prevent students from copying each other (as all the questions are different), make marking and assessing easy for the teacher (as all the answers are the same!), and provide a lovely extra challenge for students as they try to figure out exactly what is going on! To access the full collection, and read John’s background notes, please visit: http://www.mrbartonmaths.com/common.htm
Autograph Activity - Reflection Golf
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Autograph Activity - Reflection Golf

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An Autograph Player activity where students investigate reflections by playing golf. You can use this activity on the interactive whiteboard, or for your students to investigate on their own. Autograph does not need to be installed to use this activity (so your students can even use it at home), but you will need to install the free Autograph Player add-on (instructions given after clicking the link). For a full list of Autograph Activities, please click on the other web-link.
Autograph Activity - Angle at the Centre
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Autograph Activity - Angle at the Centre

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An Autograph Player activity to illustrate The Angle at the Centre circle theorem. You can use this activity on the interactive whiteboard, or for your students to investigate on their own. Autograph does not need to be installed to use this activity (so your students can even use it at home), but you will need to install the free Autograph Player add-on (instructions given after clicking the link). For a full list of Autograph Activities, please click on the other web-link.