As a profession, we teachers seem to love reinventing the wheel and, particularly as I was training and in my NQT year, this frustrated me. Even more experienced teachers of 10, 20 years in the profession, who can pull out an old resource or plan from their files, seemed to be constantly needing to resource their lessons from scratch. To make matters worse, several schools I've come across seem to be anti-text book and/or anti-worksheet meaning teachers can feel like they need to create all their questions from scratch even for pupils to practice basic skills. I know this was certainly my experience.
Surely there were great resources out there that were tried and tested? Indeed there are but (I'm going to let you in on a big secret here, are you ready?) the internet is a very big place and finding quality resources can take time, especially when you're new. Which is why when Joe Kirby wrote about renewable resources a few years ago it was an idea that immediately gripped me. So, when a colleague of mind brought back a maths basic skills worksheet from a trip to Shanghai, it sparked an idea. The aim of these sheets was to ensure quick and automated basic skills using the four operations, comparison and representation. I knew straight away that several pupils in my class would benefit from this sort of regular, low stakes practice but I didn't want to have to create a new sheet every time I wanted them to practice these skills: if they had the same sheet too often then they could just learn the pattern of answers and it was going to be too time consuming to create a new sheet every time. I had a dilemma and needed a renewable solution. Step forward Microsoft Excel. I worked with a colleague, Anna Daubney, to create several sheets which would enable this sort of practice and generate new questions at the press of a button so that the same pattern and style of questions appeared every time but with new questions to answer. Hey-presto, we had our first renewable resource. We went on to create similar sheets for Fraction, Decimal and Percentage equivalence and for Times Tables. Over the years, we've tweaked the different sheets and I still use them when my pupils need them. If you think you may find them useful too, you can find a link to all of these on the resources tab of this site. Why reinvent the wheel? Sharing is caring!
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