{"id":3004,"date":"2015-06-14T22:22:04","date_gmt":"2015-06-14T21:22:04","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/mathedup.co.uk\/?p=3004"},"modified":"2015-08-27T13:27:16","modified_gmt":"2015-08-27T12:27:16","slug":"getting-a-taste","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.mathedup.co.uk\/getting-a-taste\/","title":{"rendered":"Getting a taste"},"content":{"rendered":"
This post was prompted by a tweet\u00a0from\u00a0@rufuswilliam<\/a> who asked about A-level taster sessions for year 11s in today’s #mathsTLP chat (7pm-8pm every Sunday).\u00a0For those of you who are unaware, most schools invite their year 11 students back after their GCSE exams for a couple of days to give them a ‘taste’ of A-levels and what they are all about. The idea is to help them mentally prepare for what awaits them after the summer (not that anything\u00a0really<\/em> prepares them for the huge jump from GCSE to A-Level).<\/p>\n All teachers have their preferred approach to these taster sessions and I thought I would share what I have done over the past couple of years.. After an intro into the course and sharing what our department expectations are, I like them to get their hands dirty with a bit of exploring and coming up with conjectures. I stick to their GCSE knowledge so there is no new learning, but there is a higher level of challenge and the opportunity for some students to\u00a0go on and\u00a0prove their conjectures.\u00a0A useful approach as it is easy to differentiate and everyone feels some success and, most importantly, it gives them an insight into what maths is all about.\u00a0Here<\/a> is\u00a0the lesson I used last year with our\u00a0A-Level maths taster sessions<\/a>\u00a0(Smart Notebook).\u00a0I have taken the main ideas form the fantastic RISP activities<\/a>. If you haven’t come across these before, RISP<\/a> stands for ‘Rich Starting Points’ – definitely recommend you check them out!<\/p>\n