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Help please - I'm trying to buy additional material to help my ds with maths, but can't work out what level he is!! Anyone got a 13 year old and can help?

24 replies

OwlMother · 19/06/2013 21:52

My 13 year old ds struggles with maths and needs more exercises to reinforce his learning. We've been going through them together and now need more - we've run out of the school ones.

I've looked on amazon and I can't work out what to buy. Everything seems to rely on knowing what "key stage" you are. My ds is educated in scotland, at an independent school, so follows neither "key stages" nor the "curriculum for excellence". It's therefore hard to know which book to get.

He has been doing multiplying and dividing fractions, equations (only with basic brackets), working out angles, can't remember what else sorry - that was just tonight.

Has anyone got a child of a similar age that could make a stab at what stage I'm aiming at?

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tiggytape · 19/06/2013 22:09

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booksteensandmagazines · 19/06/2013 22:10

he should be Key Stage 3 - have you looked at the BBC bite size - www.bbc.co.uk/bitesize/ks3/maths/ - he can use it to reinforce his learning and then perhaps seeing how he does with that you could then look at buying a study guide or test booklet.

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OwlMother · 19/06/2013 22:13

I'll have a look at the SATs papers thank you. I
from what I've looked at on Amazon so far, the nearest book I found seemed to be KS3 5-8, but it seemed a bit simplistic. Do the SAT things relate to the Key stages or is that something else entirely? Excuse my ignorance, neither dh nor myself are familiar with the english system.

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OwlMother · 19/06/2013 22:15

Thank you booksteensandmagazines. I've had a look at Bitesize before ( mainly when desperately looking for help myself when my own maths lets me down!) I'll look at it further. It does seem really clearly explained and is not too overwhelming looking!!

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MustTidyUpMustTidyUp · 19/06/2013 22:18

Note that the SATs paper will get harder as you go through - so he will find the first section easy but it will be very difficult towards the end.
Could you email the school and ask his teacher for suggestions on materials? Btw the SATs assess their level at the end of a key stage. Sounds to me like level 6 work you described.

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ITCouldBeWorse · 19/06/2013 22:20

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ThreeBeeOneGee · 19/06/2013 22:21

DS1 (13) has been using the CGP KS3 revision guide and workbook for his Maths revision. I think a book aimed at level 5-8 sounds about right for a 13 year old.

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OwlMother · 19/06/2013 22:24

His teacher has given him quite a lot of school produced revision papers, but has says he doesn't really want to overburden him. He has just finished his S1 assessments and the school are saying that they would suggest he takes it easy over the holidays.

Because he is so unsure though, we have ended up doing all of the material with me having to talk him though it all - I'd just like to have something to let him have a go at himself without me prodding him.

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ITCouldBeWorse · 19/06/2013 22:26

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OwlMother · 19/06/2013 22:30

ITCouldBeWorse - I totally get what you're saying re independent schools, however to be fair to the school, I also know my son! He is ultimately pretty lazy and a perpetual daydreamer. In his christmas report it was flagged that he was present but not engaged. He has a tendency to switch off. After christmas he has upped his game and his end of year marks reflected that.

Also, confusingly, I know that while he's not doing brilliantly where he is- friends with bright children at local (good) state schools are working at the same level ( if not slightly lower) than he is.

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OwlMother · 19/06/2013 22:33

ThreeBeeOneGee - thank you. Think I'll order one and go from there. Although I thought it seemed a bit simpler than what he'd been doing there also seemed to be bits I'm not sure he's done. Also simpler might be best from the point of view of reinforcement/ confidence.

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ITCouldBeWorse · 19/06/2013 22:36

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OwlMother · 19/06/2013 22:40

I totally understand what you're saying. At ds's age, I rarely dropped a mark and would have been mortified to be anywhere other than the top set!! I find ds's approach quite difficult to get my head around. Just have to keep telling myself we're all different!

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soontobeslendergirl · 20/06/2013 11:30

I have an almost 13 year old and an almost 12 year old, both in Scottish CfE system, but both good at maths and I'd say both are in advance of what you describe.

We bought this book:
www.amazon.co.uk/dp/1405322462?tag=mumsnet&ascsubtag=mnforum-21

Mainly for ourselves tbf but it is very well laid out, easy to read and covers all the basics really well - I think it's good for their age group.

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OwlMother · 20/06/2013 12:47

Thanks for your reply - am I right in assuming P7 and S1 for your dc? The book you've linked to looks good, but not really what we're looking for- it was more of a workbook style thing so ds could work through examples.

He's done a lot of Schofield and Sims at primary school - his mental maths is very sharp as a result - so it was a similar kind of thing I was looking for.

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OwlMother · 20/06/2013 13:07

soontobeslendergirl - which books/ resources do your dc use at school? I've just realised that this is the other answer, simply buy a different textbook!!

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noblegiraffe · 20/06/2013 13:12

Here are the maths level descriptors
kangaroomaths.com/free_resources/ks3/schedules/level_descriptors.doc

He sounds about a level 6, which for a 13 year old is ok.

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OwlMother · 20/06/2013 13:18

noble giraffe Thanks for that! looking at that briefly is quite reassuring. Most of what is described in level six he can do quite confidently.

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adoptmama · 20/06/2013 13:34

Instead of buying books try Maths Whizz web site. It will automatically work out where he is strong and weak. You can track his progress via reports, see how much he is logged on etc. and also send him messages. He will earn 'prizes' as he progresses. It will set him tasks at his level and you will see good progressions. Offers lots of opportunities to revisit topics via the 'bedroom' area. Motivates as it is all done online. Highly recommend it to you.

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OwlMother · 20/06/2013 13:46

Thanks for the suggestion, I'll have a look. My dd ( truly awful at maths) has a subscription to Komodo maths and loves it, it really seems to be helping her. It doesn't go as old as ds needs though. Good to know there is am option.

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soontobeslendergirl · 20/06/2013 14:57

Sorry Owl, eldest has just gone into S2 (technically still 1st year ifkwim) and youngest about to finish P7. I have no idea what they use at school - Embarrasingly I leave them pretty much to it - they are both bright seem to be doing well enough - they rarely have homework (No1 son tends to do all his in class when he is finished the rest of his work). In terms of Maths, they were always top of the class through primary although No1 son cannot do mental maths and struggles with times tables - this hasn't stopped him getting a silver award in the UK maths challenge recently. The new CfE reports don't really lend themselves to knowing how well they are doing tbh. The teachers seem more than happy though.

We bought the book as it worked through how they teach maths now and I thought we may need to help them but it hasn't been the case luckily.

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Erebus · 21/06/2013 09:25

Thanks for the OP. DS1 is 14, in Y9 and just scored 6 high/6.8 in his end-of-year maths exam.... which is where he was at the end of Y8 Sad... Admittedly the test was an old KS3 SATS paper and I had no idea they existed; he apparently conveniently 'forgot' when the test actually was and did 4 hours panic revision the previous evening despite me nagging him throughout the half term hols, so all in all I know he could have done better.

But partly to consolidate his maths and partly to let him know we feel he's under-performing, I need some additional material, too.

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snowmummy · 21/06/2013 09:30

Surely his Maths teacher could help you?

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janesnowdon1 · 21/06/2013 16:54

www.khanacademy.org/ You could try out this site (its free) but works like MyMaths which a lot of schools subscribe to. A little video explains what to do and then you work through examples which are automatically marked and your progress can be tracked.

tlp.excellencegateway.org.uk/resource/su_mat_5822/screens/math_004_004_005/page.html These reources were developed under Malcolm Swann in 2005/6 (Professor of Maths Education at Nottingham and a world leader in maths education) to show teachers the best practice way of communicating maths. The activities (Mostly shape, Mostly probability etc) allow the student to make connections and gain conceptual understanding in words, visually, algebraically etc and many are based on a matching cards system (instructions for use are included)

I sometimes do them with my children and they really like discussing them and laying the cards out all over the kitchen table - they have really helped them with their mathematical understanding.

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