Surds ... are becoming more popular with GCSE maths questions although, rather than calculating, you'll be expected to leave the answer in a 'surd form.' This usually means leaving as a square root, which cannot be reduced to a whole number. They are much more accurate than trying to calculate with decimals, although it's quite difficult to give precise answers to the … [Read more...]
Inequalities on a graph – mid-level GCSE maths
Download a copy of the questions here: QT - Inequalities on Graphs Download a copy of the written answers: QT - Inequalities on Graphs ANSWERS Inequalities questions seem to be asked either as finding a region on a graph, solving or showing on a numberline. They're all around level 6 in GCSE mathematics and it's worthwhile practising the types of questions … [Read more...]
Box plots – mid-level GCSE mathematics
Here’s a few videos on how to draw box plots, sometimes called box and whisker diagrams. They are fairly popular on GCSE mathematics although occasionally you'll be asked to compare them with cumulative frequency diagrams. Both CF and box plots give the same time of information - median, upper / lower quartiles and range. questions where Top Tips! ● Box plots are just … [Read more...]
Cumulative frequency diagrams – GCSE mathematics mid-level
Cumulative frequency diagrams are quite popular on GCSE mathematics papers. They can be fairly straightforward, although it'll be useful to also practice box plots. The information is fairly similar ... you can find the median, quartiles and ranges in both, with a typical question comparing information from both sources. Q4 on these past paper questions might be useful to … [Read more...]
How to use a probability tree – GCSE mathematics
Here's a few videos on how to work with a probability tree diagram that I hope might be useful. They've always been fairly popular on GCSE mathematics and generally fall into 2 types of questions: 'with' and 'without' replacement. The 'with' tend to be entirely unrelated events, such as badminton and tennis games. The 'without' are usually sweets or marbles taken out of … [Read more...]