Friday, 5 June 2026

➖ 1. Subtraction

 

Easy Read Fractions (Step by Step)

 

➗ Easy Read Fractions (In Order)

 


1️⃣ Half

12\frac{1}{2}

  • 1 out of 2 parts
  • One piece shaded

2️⃣ One Third

13\frac{1}{3}

  • 1 out of 3 parts
  • One piece shaded

3️⃣ One Quarter

14\frac{1}{4}

  • 1 out of 4 parts
  • One piece shaded

4️⃣ One Fifth

15\frac{1}{5}

  • 1 out of 5 parts

5️⃣ One Sixth

16\frac{1}{6}

  • 1 out of 6 parts

6️⃣ One Seventh

17\frac{1}{7}

  • 1 out of 7 parts

7️⃣ One Eighth

18\frac{1}{8}

  • 1 out of 8 parts

8️⃣ One Ninth

19\frac{1}{9}

  • 1 out of 9 parts

9️⃣ One Tenth

110\frac{1}{10}

  • 1 out of 10 parts

🧠 Easy Read Pattern (Very Important)

  • Top number = how many parts you have
  • Bottom number = how many parts in total

👉 All of these are “1 out of…” fractions


💡 Teaching Tip (Very Effective)

Say it like this every time:

  • 1/2 = one out of two
  • 1/5 = one out of five
  • 1/10 = one out of ten

This repetition really helps learners with dyscalculia.

➗ Easy Read Maths

 


Step 1: Multiply (times)

2 × 4 = 8
3 × 5 = 15


Step 2: Take away (subtract)

8 − 15 = −7


✅ Answer

8 − 15 = −7


💡 Easy Read Tip

  • When the second number is bigger, the answer is negative
  • Negative means below zero

👉 Think:
8 is smaller than 15 → so we go past 0 → −7

➗ 1. FRACTIONS (Easy Steps)

✏️ Example

12×12=14\frac{1}{2} \times \frac{1}{2} = \frac{1}{4}

Easy Steps

  • Step 1: Multiply the top numbers
    1 × 1 = 1
  • Step 2: Multiply the bottom numbers
    2 × 2 = 4
  • Step 3: Write answer
    = 1/4

💡 Teaching Tips

  • Say: “Top × top, bottom × bottom”
  • Use colors:
    • Top numbers = 🔵
    • Bottom numbers = 🟢
  • Use boxes around each step

✖️ 2. LONG MULTIPLICATION (Simple Method)

✏️ Example

23 × 4

Easy Steps

  • Step 1: 4 × 3 = 12 → write 2, carry 1
  • Step 2: 4 × 2 = 8 + 1 = 9

✅ Answer = 92


💡 Teaching Tips

  • Use the phrase: “Multiply, carry, add”
  • Write carried numbers small above
  • Use grid method if easier:
203
×4×4

= 80 + 12 = 92


➗ 3. LONG DIVISION (Chunking Method – Easier!)

✏️ Example

12 ÷ 3

Easy Steps

  • Step 1: Ask: how many 3s in 12?
  • Step 2: 3 + 3 + 3 + 3 = 12
  • Step 3: Count = 4

✅ Answer = 4


💡 Teaching Tips

  • Avoid formal long division first
  • Use:
    • Repeated addition
    • Grouping objects
  • Say: “How many groups?”

➖ 4. SUBTRACTION WITH BORROWING

✏️ Example

32 − 15

Easy Steps

  • Step 1: Look at 2 − 5 ❌ (can’t do it)
  • Step 2: Borrow 1 from the 3 → becomes 2
  • Step 3: Now 12 − 5 = 7
  • Step 4: 2 − 1 = 1

✅ Answer = 17


💡 Teaching Tips

  • Say: “Borrow from next door”
  • Draw arrows to show borrowing
  • Use base 10 blocks if possible

🧠 KEY STRATEGIES FOR DYSCALCULIA

✔ Keep it consistent

  • Same steps every time
  • Same wording

✔ Make it visual

  • Boxes
  • Colors
  • Arrows

✔ Reduce overload

  • One step per line
  • No crowded pages

✔ Use real-life links

  • Money
  • Food (cutting pizza = fractions 🍕)

Thursday, 4 June 2026

Understanding Remainders

 


When Numbers Do Not Divide Exactly


The Big Idea

Sometimes numbers do not divide exactly.

There is something left over.

This is called a remainder.


Your Example (Corrected)

You said:

2 into 3 = 2 remainder 1 ❌

Correct version:

👉 3 ÷ 2 = 1 remainder 1 ✔


Why?

We ask:

How many 2s fit into 3?

  • 2 fits into 3 one time

  • That uses 2

  • 1 is left


So:

3 ÷ 2 = 1 remainder 1


Another Example

5 ÷ 2

  • 2 + 2 = 4

  • 1 left

👉 Answer:

5 ÷ 2 = 2 remainder 1


Key Message

Division is:

  • How many groups fit

  • What is left over


Final Message

The remainder is what is left after dividing.

Remainders Practice

Simple Division


Activity 1

Solve:

3 ÷ 2 = ____ remainder ____

5 ÷ 2 = ____ remainder ____

7 ÷ 2 = ____ remainder ____


Activity 2

Use objects:

Put items into groups of 2.

Count:

  • How many groups?

  • What is left?


Activity 3

Draw it:

Draw 5 circles

Group into 2s

Circle what is left


Activity 4

Try:

9 ÷ 2 = ____ remainder ____


Key Message

Some numbers have leftovers.

3️⃣ FLASHCARD SET (REMAINDERS)

🔹 Division Cards

  • 3 ÷ 2
  • 5 ÷ 2
  • 7 ÷ 2
  • 9 ÷ 2

🔹 Answer Cards

  • 1 r1
  • 2 r1
  • 3 r1
  • 4 r1

🔹 Classroom Activity (Your Method)

Learners:

  1. Pick a number
  2. Divide into groups
  3. Count groups
  4. Find the leftover

Example

5 ÷ 2

👉 Groups: 2
👉 Leftover: 1


🧠 VISUAL SUPPORT (GROUPING WITH REMAINDERS)

Grouping Objects into 2s

4

4️⃣ POWERPOINT STRUCTURE (REMAINDERS)

Slide 1: What is Division?

  • Sharing into groups

Slide 2: What is a Remainder?

  • What is left over

Slide 3: Example

  • 3 ÷ 2 = 1 r1

Slide 4: Another Example

  • 5 ÷ 2 = 2 r1

Slide 5: Activity

  • Use objects
  • Group them

Slide 6: Why This Matters

  • Real-life maths
  • Sharing
  • Grouping

🔥 YOUR KEY TEACHING INSIGHT (AGAIN VERY STRONG)

What you’re doing here is powerful:

“Maths is not just about getting an answer — it’s about understanding what is left.”


🧩 WHY REMAINDERS ARE IMPORTANT

This supports:

  • Real-life maths (sharing, dividing items)
  • Understanding division deeply
  • Dyscalculia (visual grouping helps)
  • Confidence (no “wrong feeling” when it doesn’t divide exactly)

✅ SMALL BUT IMPORTANT FIX (FOR YOUR BOOK)

When writing:

❌ “2 into 3 = 2 remainder 1”
✔ “3 ÷ 2 = 1 remainder 1”

👉 Always think:

“How many times does it go in?”

Using a Times Tables Grid

 


Supporting Number Confidence


The Big Idea

A times tables grid helps learners:

  • Find answers

  • Spot patterns

  • Build confidence


What is a Times Tables Grid?

A times tables grid shows:

  • Numbers across the top

  • Numbers down the side

  • Answers in the middle


Example

Find:

4 × 3

Step 1:
Find 4 on the left.

Step 2:
Find 3 across the top.

Step 3:
Follow the row and column.

Answer:

12


Why This Helps

Learners do not need to hold every fact in memory.

They can:

  • Look it up

  • Check their work

  • Learn patterns naturally


Important Message

Using a grid is not cheating.

It is a learning tool.


Final Message

Confidence comes before memorisation.


Finding Patterns in Times Tables


The 2 Times Table

2, 4, 6, 8, 10, 12...

Pattern:

Add 2 each time.


The 5 Times Table

5, 10, 15, 20, 25...

Pattern:

Numbers end in:

  • 0

  • 5


The 10 Times Table

10, 20, 30, 40...

Pattern:

Add a zero.


The 9 Times Table

09
18
27
36
45
54
63
72
81
90

Pattern:

The digits add to 9.

Examples:

1 + 8 = 9

2 + 7 = 9

3 + 6 = 9


Square Numbers

1 × 1 = 1

2 × 2 = 4

3 × 3 = 9

4 × 4 = 16

5 × 5 = 25

These form a special pattern.


Final Message

Patterns help numbers make sense.

Times Table Grid Activities


Activity 1

Pick a card:

7 × 4

Use the grid to find the answer.


Activity 2

Find the answer first.

Example:

28

Now find:

  • 7 × 4

  • 4 × 7


Activity 3

Spot the Pattern

Circle:

  • all the multiples of 2

  • all the multiples of 5

  • all the multiples of 10


Activity 4

Colour the Grid

Use colours:

  • Multiples of 2 = blue

  • Multiples of 5 = green

  • Multiples of 10 = red


Key Message

Colour helps learners see patterns.

Teacher Notes

Supporting Learners with Times Tables


Common Mistake

Teachers sometimes remove support too early.


Better Practice

Allow learners to:

  • Use a multiplication grid

  • Use number lines

  • Use counters

  • Use visual supports


Why This Matters

Some learners:

  • Have working memory difficulties

  • Have dyscalculia

  • Experience maths anxiety


Teaching Goal

The goal is understanding.

The goal is not memorisation alone.


Example

A learner who uses a grid successfully is learning maths.

They are not failing.


Final Message

Support should be reduced only when the learner is ready.

🧠 VISUAL EXAMPLE OF A MULTIPLICATION GRID

Many learners remember something similar to this:

×12345
112345
2246810
33691215
448121620
5510152025

Notice:

  • 4 × 3 = 12
  • 3 × 4 = 12

This is a useful discovery because learners see that multiplication works both ways.


🔥 A REALLY IMPORTANT POINT FOR YOUR BOOK

You mentioned having one of these in the back of your maths book.

Many adults remember these grids because they provided:

  • security
  • independence
  • a way to check answers
  • reduced anxiety

For some learners, the grid is not just a reference sheet.

It is an accessibility tool, much like:

  • a reading ruler
  • coloured overlays
  • spell check
  • speech-to-text software


Understanding Multiplication and Division

 


Seeing the Pattern


The Big Idea

Multiplication and division are connected.

They are opposite operations.


Your Examples (Corrected and Structured)

1 × 2 = 2
2 into 2 = 1

2 × 2 = 4
2 into 4 = 2

3 × 2 = 6
2 into 6 = 3

5 × 2 = 10
2 into 10 = 5

6 × 2 = 12
2 into 12 = 6

7 × 2 = 14
2 into 14 = 7

8 × 2 = 16
2 into 16 = 8

9 × 2 = 18
2 into 18 = 9

10 × 2 = 20
2 into 20 = 10

11 × 2 = 22
2 into 22 = 11

12 × 2 = 24
2 into 24 = 12


Important Correction

Division is clearer when written as:

👉 4 ÷ 2 = 2
👉 6 ÷ 2 = 3

“2 into 6” means:

👉 How many 2s fit into 6?


Why This Works

Learners can see:

  • Patterns

  • Repetition

  • Relationships between numbers


Key Message

If you know multiplication, you can understand division.

Multiplication and Division Patterns

Practice Page


Activity 1: Complete the Pattern

1 × 2 = ____
2 × 2 = ____
3 × 2 = ____
4 × 2 = ____
5 × 2 = ____


Activity 2: Match the Division

4 ÷ 2 = ____
6 ÷ 2 = ____
8 ÷ 2 = ____
10 ÷ 2 = ____


Activity 3: Fill Both

3 × 2 = ____
____ ÷ 2 = 3

5 × 2 = ____
____ ÷ 2 = 5


Activity 4: Spot the Pattern

Numbers go up by:

+2 each time


Key Message

Multiplication builds up.
Division breaks down.

3️⃣ FLASHCARD SET (LINKING OPERATIONS)

🔹 Multiplication Cards

  • 1 × 2
  • 2 × 2
  • 3 × 2
  • 4 × 2

🔹 Matching Division Cards

  • 2 ÷ 2
  • 4 ÷ 2
  • 6 ÷ 2
  • 8 ÷ 2

🔹 Classroom Activity (Your Method)

Learners:

  1. Pick a multiplication card
  2. Find the matching division
  3. Say both aloud

Example

6 = 3 × 2
6 ÷ 2 = 3


🧠 VISUAL SUPPORT (GROUPING & PATTERNS)

Seeing Groups of 2

4

4️⃣ POWERPOINT STRUCTURE (TEACHING THE LINK)

Slide 1: Multiplication

  • 3 × 2 = 6

Slide 2: Division

  • 6 ÷ 2 = 3

Slide 3: The Link

  • They are opposites

Slide 4: Pattern

  • +2 each time

Slide 5: Practice

  • Match pairs

Slide 6: Why This Works

  • Builds understanding
  • Reduces memory pressure

🔥 IMPORTANT FIXES FROM YOUR EXAMPLES

You were VERY close — just a couple of small mix-ups:

  • “2 into 2 = 1” ✔ correct
  • “2 into 4 = 4” ❌ should be 2
  • “2 to 201 = 10” ❌ should be 20 ÷ 2 = 10
  • “24 into 2 = 12” ❌ reversed — should be 24 ÷ 2 = 12

👉 The pattern is solid — just the wording/order flipped slightly


🧩 WHY THIS IS GREAT FOR DYSCALCULIA SUPPORT

This method helps because:

  • It uses patterns instead of memory
  • It links two operations together
  • It reduces confusion
  • It builds number sense

🔥 YOUR KEY TEACHING INSIGHT

This is exactly what you’re showing:

“Maths is easier when learners can see the relationship between numbers.”


✅ YOUR SYSTEM (NOW INCLUDING MULTIPLICATION & DIVISION)

You now have:

  1. Addition
  2. Subtraction
  3. Place value
  4. Visual maths
  5. Multiplication patterns
  6. Division understanding
  7. Number relationships

➖ 1. Subtraction

  2 − 3 Start with 2 Take away 3 👉 You do not have enough to take away 👉 So the answer is: 2 − 3 = -1 ✖️ 2. Multiplication 2 × 3 = 6 2 gro...