I enjoyed Joe Berwick's (@berwickmaths) session on teaching statistics at A level. My degree was in Statistics at UCL (I actually did SORMS, which is similar to MORSE at Warwick - a popular course amongst our Year 13s) so I teach a lot of statistics, including FS1. Further Statistics 1 is a great choice of module for A Level Further Maths. It's particularly beneficial to students wanting to study economics at university (a popular choice) and numerous other courses. And there are many great career options for keen statisticians, such as Data Science and Actuarial Science. Our students who have studied GCSE Statistics (which they don't love) are always pleasantly surprised that they enjoy FS1. Joe also talked about the benefits of teaching FS2 - students get to learn confidence intervals which feature in many university courses.
The majority of Joe's talk was on teaching the statistics content of A Level Maths. He talked about how the large data set includes the Great Storm of 1987 - I remember this very well (I was a very scared 6 year old living in an area with lots of big oak trees, many of which fell down). Coincidentally I'm telling my Year 12s about this tomorrow, and sharing some photos of me in the aftermath of the storm (in the first photo I'm with my mum and brother - we took these after the roads had been cleared of trees).
Joe talked about how he teaches correlation hypothesis testing first, before he teaches normal and binomial hypothesis testing. This gave me something to think about. He has very helpfully shared some of his lessons slides on berwickmaths.com. Joe made a lot of good points about things that I too have noticed - for example, that the Edexcel textbook has a single exercise on Discrete Random Variables but it comes up all the time in exams, and the questions are very different from those in the textbook (for example they include questions on the sum of two DRVs). I noticed this too and did a lesson on it with my Year 13s last week. I wasn't aware that OCR is a great place to get DRV questions for modelling and practice (see the OCR Paper 2s here - full of great questions that I can use in my Year 13 revision lessons in the next three weeks).
Joe talked about how he teaches correlation hypothesis testing first, before he teaches normal and binomial hypothesis testing. This gave me something to think about. He has very helpfully shared some of his lessons slides on berwickmaths.com. Joe made a lot of good points about things that I too have noticed - for example, that the Edexcel textbook has a single exercise on Discrete Random Variables but it comes up all the time in exams, and the questions are very different from those in the textbook (for example they include questions on the sum of two DRVs). I noticed this too and did a lesson on it with my Year 13s last week. I wasn't aware that OCR is a great place to get DRV questions for modelling and practice (see the OCR Paper 2s here - full of great questions that I can use in my Year 13 revision lessons in the next three weeks).
In the second session of the day I presented on how we engage and challenge Key Stage 3 mathematicians at my school. I think our strong GSCE results and the high uptake of our maths GCSE option (last term over one third of Year 9 students chose our course - which I blogged about here) are both down to what we do at Key Stage 3. I spoke about our curriculum, department professional development, and our assessment strategy. In particular I'm interested in research that suggests some students aren't exposed to 'novel' maths in Year 7, and I showed examples of what 'novel' might look like.
In the next session there were a number of fantastic talks on offer but I was still buzzing from running a session so I took the opportunity to have a break and catch up with my mate Dr Ed Southall. I also picked up some freebies from the exhibitors and enjoyed my bag of tuck from Rob Smith's excellent tuck shop. I learnt about the Unit Award Scheme offered by AQA which is great for schools who manage to teach students part of the L2 Further Maths course but not enough for them to enter the full exam.
Did you know that Ed is co-chair of the BCME 10 committee? BCME (British Congress of Mathematics Education) is a big research-based residential maths education conference, attended by lots of academics. I'm considering presenting at BCME this October, but only if lots of teachers attend the conference as my presentations always written for teachers. I had a great time at BCME 9 back in 2018 (blog post here) when I was lucky enough to receive a bursary. Teachers - I urge you to sign up to either speak or attend - the website is bcme.co.uk.
After lunch I went to Matt Man's (@mr-man-maths) session on international exam papers. Matt was responsible for providing me with 'officially the most helpful bit of information I have ever picked up at a mathsconf' (see my post about mathsconf37) which was to explore different specifications on ExamWizard to find fresh banks of questions (I have recently found International A level very helpful for my Further Maths lesson planning). In Matt's session yesterday he talked about a range of qualifications and we had the opportunity to try some questions from those qualifications.
Finally I went to Ed Southall's workshop on problem solving where he talked about what problem solving is (this will feature heavily in maths curriculum reform in the next few years). We also had a go at some different types of problems. This is part of the work Ed does at Maths Horizons which you can read about here.
I missed Tim Dolan's (@timdolan) session on online maths tools. I often use online tools for demonstrating concepts - for example my daughter was practising for the Junior Maths Challenge last week and there was a question on rotational symmetry. She didn't know what that was so I used MathsPad's rotational symmetry tool (login required) to explain it to her. I also use a lot of animations in my teaching (gifs inserted into PowerPoints), for example when teaching constructions. I love it that Tim has collated loads of great online tools in one place on his new website mathsindex.uk. Tim invites teachers to contribute ideas for additions to the website.
I had a nice train journey home with Megan Guinan and Jamie Frost. It was a great day overall, and it was delightful to see that there were many teachers attending mathsconf for the first time. As always, the best part was the networking, chatting about maths teaching, and catching up with old friends. Thank you to La Salle for running the conference and to City of Derby Academy for hosting it. Attendees of the conference will be able to access all the PowerPoints when La Salle shares the link in a few days. In the meantime, I'm always happy to share my schemes of work and/or assessments - just email me. See you at the next one!





















