notebook, 611.48 KB
notebook, 611.48 KB
pptx, 915.36 KB
pptx, 915.36 KB
docx, 14.33 KB
docx, 14.33 KB
docx, 16.75 KB
docx, 16.75 KB
Two-way tables, filling in the missing information. I needed some questions on this for a lesson and struggled to find what I was looking for so wrote this. Typos now corrected!
Creative Commons "Sharealike"

Reviews

4.8

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kevinweav

6 years ago
5

Excellent. Nice task to close off an introduction to the topic once a class have had a go at a few typical questions. This definitely stops it from getting too repetitive in an hour lesson - great for the second half of the lesson.

TES Resource Team

6 years ago
5

Thank you for publishing your resource. It has been selected to be featured in <a href="https://www.tes.com/teaching-resources/collections/secondary-maths/"> a new secondary maths collection</a>.

rachel555

7 years ago
5

DaveGale

7 years ago
5

Lots of practise at putting together a two-way table from a set of information. I will admit to being a bit sceptical that the coffee spilling is a genuine scenario ;-) <br /> I like the idea of students creating their own puzzles for the sixth form years too!

LisaKirby123

9 years ago
5

Not the usual tedious tables - a bit more interesting. My year 7 loved them. I extended the task by asking the pupils to make up their own puzzles for staff/6th form - to see how few clues were necessary.

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