-
Recent Posts
Recent Comments
Archives
- May 2019
- April 2019
- March 2019
- February 2019
- January 2019
- December 2018
- November 2018
- October 2018
- September 2018
- July 2018
- June 2018
- May 2018
- April 2018
- March 2018
- February 2018
- January 2018
- December 2017
- November 2017
- October 2017
- September 2017
- January 2017
- July 2016
- June 2016
- May 2016
- April 2016
- March 2016
- February 2016
- January 2016
- December 2015
- November 2015
- October 2015
- September 2015
- April 2015
- January 2015
Visitors around the world
Category Archives: Maths
If you want to know more about trigonometry…
Trigonometry is a really interesting branch of mathematics which is all about triangles and their angles.
If you are lucky enough to have a scientific calculator, you could experiment with it to find out about the relationships between the length of different sides of triangles (and different types of triangles) and the sines, cosines and tangents of all the angles.
e.g. If I had an equilateral triangle, all the sides would be equal (let’s say they are all 6 cm). In this case, the cosine of the base angles would be found by dividing half of the baseline (= 3 cm) by the (hypotenuse) side that we know is 6 cm. So we have Cosine of the base angle = 3/6 = 0.5. So inverse Cosine 0.5 is the angle at the base of the triangle… Look it up to see what you get…
There is also a useful site available on ‘Maths is fun’ which will introduce you to the ideas if you want to look further… Click on the image above to follow the link and play with the angles to find out more.
Posted in Maths, Maths Challenges, pupils, Year 6
Leave a comment
Investigating isosceles triangles 2
Posted in Maths, Maths Challenges, pupils, Year 6
Leave a comment
Countdown – fractions game
Here is the other NRICH Countdown game we tried last week. There are several levels to this game which do get harder. We were managing Levels 1 and 2 pretty well on Friday. Maybe we could try out Level 3? See what you think of it.
Posted in Maths, Maths Challenges, pupils, Year 6
Leave a comment
Countdown game – numbers
Here is the link to the NRICH countdown game we played last week.
Click on the image to go to the online game.
This is a fun way to practise your mental maths and apply your number skills.
Posted in Maths, Maths Challenges, pupils, Year 6
Leave a comment
Times Tables Shift Game
Here’s the link to the Times Tables Shift challenge on NRICH that we played the other day. Click the link to play. Start at Level 1 to learn the game and see if you can get to Level 4.
Posted in Maths, pupils, Year 6
Leave a comment
Number lines in disguise
This is another game we tried that you may want to play at home. The idea is to find the missing number on the number line. You can play at several different levels. Start at level 1 and see how far you can get. Be warned! It goes into fractions sometimes so can get rather challenging! Click on the number line to connect to the game.
Posted in Homework, Maths, Maths Challenges, pupils, Year 6
Leave a comment
Maths games to help practise using negative numbers
These games are ones we tried in class today from the NRICH maths site. They are a fun way to practise thinking strategically and using negative numbers in calculations quickly. Click on the images to find and enjoy the games.
Posted in Homework, Maths, pupils, Year 6
Leave a comment
Update on Paper folding polygon challenge
We looked at this problem again today and this time tried to investigate the maximum number of sides on a polygon we could create using one fold starting from paper that was different initial polygons.
With one fold, we found the that the biggest polygons we could make were as below:
Starting with a triangle, one fold produced at most a polygon with 7 sides (heptagon)
With a quadilateral (investigated last time), we got a maximum of 9 sides.
With a pentagon, one fold produced a maximum of 11 sides,
Heptagons folded once produced a maximum of 13 sides,
etc.
We think we have a definite pattern now and think we have a general expresssion to describe the largest polygon that can be made from a piece of paper with x sides using n folds now is:
Maximum number of sides in folded polygon = x(n+1) +1
Well done for trying so many good ideas Y6 to investigate this.
Posted in Maths, Maths Challenges, News, pupils, Year 6
Leave a comment
Paper-folding maths problem
We had a fun maths lesson on Friday which has left us all thinking!
We started with oblong pieces of paper (A5) and the challenge was to see how many different polygons we could make using one fold only. We then had to explore the properties of the different shapes and look for symmetry, regularity, etc. We discovered that we could not make a triangle with only one fold, but we could make a variety of quadrilaterals (discussed square (regular quadrilateral), trapezium, creating different parallelograms, etc.).
Once we started looking at higher order polygons, we discovered we could make shapes up to nonagons but none were regular and only the shapes with odd numbers of sides (pentagon, heptagon, nonagon) could be created to have a line of symmetry with one fold.
Next someone suggested seeing how many different polygons they could make with two folds. Some people insisted they could make a tetradecagon (14), but others thought they could only make 13 (triskaidecagon). We are not entirely sure whether we are folding accurately so it would be good to try this again and confirm which is correct.
We decided then that we would spend the weekend investigating this further to see if there is a pattern that we can come up with to predict the maximum number of sides of polygons that can be made with a given number of folds and whether there is a mathematical explanation for this. We are sure there must be but we think we might need help to find out. So far, we think we have a sequence of 1 fold (max 9 side), 2 folds (max 13 sides), 3 folds (17 sides) which looks like there could be a pattern developing but it is getting harder and harder to be sure we have folded correctly which is why we think it would be good to see what other people think. We are wondering whether the increase in 4 each time has also got something to do with the number of sides in our initial shape (the oblong paper). Maybe we could investigate this further using a different polygon to start us off?
I have asked our friends in Year 6 at Long Itchington to see if they can help and am also asking some other people who love maths problems. I’ll let you know if we find out! If you discover anything more, it would be great to add a comment. There is a gold card for anyone coming up with ideas that they can explain to me clearly! We want to crack this before the end of term!
Posted in Maths, Maths Challenges, pupils, Year 6
2 Comments