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£1.80
In stock
Bronze Award Pin Badge for the Primary Mathematics Challenge February Bonus Round.
£1.80
In stock
Gold Award Pin Badge for the Primary Mathematics Challenge February Bonus Round
£2.50
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FMC Pin Badge of the Time Monster
£2.50
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FMC Pin Badge of the Pie Charts Monster
Carol Handyside and Louise Langford
978-1-912185-26-9
£12.60
£8.82
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A Deep Sense of Number Starting with Dots

A collection of over 50 activities, games and ideas which are perfect for whole class teaching or small groups or pairs, designed to guide children in developing number sense.
Carol Handyside and Louise Langford
£7.00
£4.90
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A Deep Sense of Number Starting with Dots

A collection of over 50 activities, games and ideas which are perfect for whole class teaching or small groups or pairs, designed to guide children in developing number sense.
Dietmar Küchemann
978-1-912185-17-7
£17.00
£11.90
In stock
Printed book with an accompanying set of downloadable whiteboard slides and a set of video files.

A collection of twenty sets of five related algebra tasks, to help students develop a better feel for school algebra.
Dietmar Küchemann
978-1-912185-24-5
£17.00
£11.90
In stock
Algeburble - Encounters with early algebra Book and PDF Slides, by Dietmar Küchemann. A collection of twenty sets of five related tasks, to help pupils engage with early or pre-algebra.
Ruth Bull & Priya Shah
978-1-911616-39-9
£20.00
£14.00
In stock
Will it be... Always, Sometimes or Never True?
This book contains statements that can be used to promote deep mathematical thinking through an investigative approach.
Ruth Bull & Priya Shah
£16.00
£11.20
In stock
Will it be... Always, Sometimes or Never True?
This book contains statements that can be used to promote deep mathematical thinking through an investigative approach. The statements are aimed to be used in an explorative manner by a child, pair or group, or class of students. Each stimulating a journey of thinking and reasoning mathematically as one attempts to convince themselves and others about their findings. What will be the conclusion? Will it be always, sometimes or never true?