Archive for the Category 'Access Module 1'

Probability basics

Tuesday, November 06th, 2007


The YouTube above is me talking through my Probability slides. Use this to frighten your children and perhaps to revise some of the material.

The exercises mentioned as being in ‘Unit 19′ in the video are in Chapter 7 of the Access Module 1 book, on pages 63 and 65. You will want to pause the YouTube video to give yourself time to do the exercises!

Don’t worry about the second set of questions referred to at the end of the video. We will return to those kinds of problem in the second Module, when I will unleash Part 2 of this video.

If it was useful, pop a comment on here and I might do a few more. Just click where it says ‘ask a question about this item’ to comment or to ask a question!

Audio Maths

Monday, October 08th, 2007

Listen to a 10 minute maths lesson and see if it helps.

Some people are auditory learners, some are visual learners and some learn through moving.

Decimals

Monday, October 01st, 2007

Ordering decimal numbers (if you found the lesson hard)

The BBC Skillswise page on decimals has a worksheet and a game on ordering decimals that will help you understand how decimal numbers work. Once you feel better with these ideas then try the next link…

Decimal Arithmetic

The worksheets about using decimals are very good for practice material. The quizzes on decimal arithmetic provide instant feedback on questions that are similar to the ones you find on quick maths tests.

HCF and LCM

Tuesday, September 25th, 2007

The Highest Common Factor (HCF) and the Lowest Common Multiple (LCM) are easy once you get used to the names.

  • HCF of 8 and 12 is 4. The HCF is smaller than the numbers.
  • LCM of 8 and 12 is 24. The LCM is larger than the numbers.

We decided one way to remember this would be

  • Factors are feeble
  • Multiples are massive.

But remember that a number is also a factor of itself and a multiple of itself.

Follow this link for a page with notes and interactive exercises :: you can try to answer the questions as you go along and then check your answers. This page explains both the ‘common sense’ method and the ‘prime factors’ method.

Any problems (or if you like this kind of exercise) just ask a question or leave a note using the ‘Ask a question about this item’ link below

Bodmas practice

Tuesday, September 25th, 2007

Follow this link and a Web page containing BODMAS questions will open in a new window.

The questions are multiple choice questions. A question such as ‘Work out 4 + 2 x 5′ is followed by four possible answers. You click on the answer you think is correct and the Web page will check your answer! If you get one wrong, read the hints and try again.

If you would like more of these online quizzes, then just leave a comment by clicking on the Ask a Question link below…

Written Sums

Monday, September 17th, 2007

Below are some links to the BBC Web site if you like using computer based material to study…

As always with the huge BBC Skillswise Web site, read the factsheets, then try a quiz or a game. Start the easier levels on the quizzes and games to get the ‘feel good’ factor. Remember, you pay for the BBC Web sites through your licence fee!

Times tables

Monday, September 17th, 2007

The BBC SkillsWise web site has a page about learning your tables. Read the factsheet, then try the quiz or game.

Look in the Access Module 1 category for stuff for the work this term…

Ask questions here as well…