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Looking for Mathematics past papers from around 1920s onwards

Last post 13/01/11 at 17:18 by autismuk, 269 replies
Post started by intuitionist1 on 02/01/11 at 00:40

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    Posted by: bombaysapphire 10/01/2011 at 21:58
    Joined on 02/10/2005
    Posts 6,787

    weebecka:
    bombaymix.

    So this mistake with Betamale's name on an earlier page was deliberate.

    I can't speak for anyone else but this "factilitation" grates on me.

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    Posted by: weebecka 10/01/2011 at 22:00
    Joined on 15/09/2010
    Posts 970

    I'm not facilitating on this thread.  I'm just talking.

    I'll grate your cheese any day Mumbai xx

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    Posted by: curlygirly 10/01/2011 at 22:02
    Joined on 06/02/2004
    Posts 4,952
    Indeed. I find posters who deliberately get peoples names wrong very irritating. They remind me of the children who call others names in the playground. They say it's only in fun but it's designed to put the perpetrator in a position of authority. It doesn't. It just makes them appear childish.
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    Posted by: weebecka 10/01/2011 at 22:11
    Joined on 15/09/2010
    Posts 970

    Tell me your name and I won't get it wrong curdles.

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    Posted by: curlygirly 10/01/2011 at 22:14
    Joined on 06/02/2004
    Posts 4,952
    If that was your attempt at humour it was very poor. If you are trying to assert some sort of superiority, it won't wash.
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    Posted by: weebecka 10/01/2011 at 22:28
    Joined on 15/09/2010
    Posts 970

    We have two large primary schools in our town Curly.  One serves the posher end of of town, the other is in the council estate.

    The former scores 'outstanding' on ever count.

    The latter school has a Montessori influence.  Reception and Year 1 self plan multisensory tasks.  The focus of the curriculum at this stage is on socialisation and building the concrete experiences of the world on which students education is then constructed with strong foundations (the wider experiences continue throughout the school).

    The reception class are famous for being seen crocadiling round town, on visits every week.  By the summer they join the whole school on a long hike.  As soon as it snows they down tools and learn to snowball fight safely.

    The students all get along - there is very little bullying and there are few factions.  The school absorbs the students who have failed or been bullied at other local primary schools easily.  Poor behaviour ceases to be an issue because the skills assumed and taught are different.

    Parents are invited into the classrooms at the beginning and end of the school day so that issues are rapidly, easily and effectively resolved.  The is a major autistic unit and all the autistic children are integrated into the main school to the fullest extent possible.

    There are no issues with this school (academic progress is very good given the cohort) but instead of scoring all 1s, like the first school (where the parents wait outside the school wall at the end of the day) it scores all 2s.

    So now it's to be improved by the first school.

    Why's that then curlygirly?

    I'm not primary, I don't understand.  

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    Posted by: curlygirly 10/01/2011 at 22:39
    Joined on 06/02/2004
    Posts 4,952
    I fail to see the relevance to

    A) your deliberately getting peoples names wrong

    B)the discussion about your credibility which several people have questioned on several threads

    c) the title of this thread

    I can only assume that this is another one of your distraction strategies ( see I work and live with children, I recognise them a mile off)

    As I'm sure you're aware I work in a school in an area considered one of the most socially deprived in the country, which is widely recognised as being a model of good practice in lots of areas ( including, but not exclusively academic acheivement). I'm involved in school improvement as a lead practicioner. If you want to discuss that issue, you perhaps should start another thread.

    In the meantime why not admit that you are trying to assume a position of superiority by deliberately getting posters names wrong

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    Posted by: nelletap 10/01/2011 at 23:02
    Joined on 25/05/2010
    Posts 2

    I have a couple of books at least I think probably from the 1970s (early) but possibly from when I took them  (1966/1967/1968 were my years for O level, then additional O then A level).  However, am busy with Bett this week and will probably forget about you in all that rush.  I will try to share with you after this week.  Not sure how to share email so we can pass on the details off list.

     

    One of the interesting aspects I have noticed is that diagrams are rarely given in older papers.  When I was young we listened to radio and I am sure that skill made it easier for students to conjure up the diagram described by the text.  To-days questions more often have the diagrams but often there is a lot of less crucial text dressing up the maths and for dyslexics, for example, who can be good at Maths, the additional, often confusing text means they need high literacy to be able to demonstrate their maths skills.  I first taught Maths in 1972 so have seen quite a lot of changes!

     

    Tricia

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    189
    Posted by: intuitionist1 11/01/2011 at 02:06
    Joined on 10/11/2008
    Posts 44

    nelletap:

    I have a couple of books at least I think probably from the 1970s (early) but possibly from when I took them  (1966/1967/1968 were my years for O level, then additional O then A level).  However, am busy with Bett this week and will probably forget about you in all that rush.  I will try to share with you after this week.  Not sure how to share email so we can pass on the details off list.

    I think it would be great if someone (perhaps even me if you would not mind lending them to me for a while) were to scan in the old papers and upload them to a website. I would be more than happy to host them on my own website assuming it is legal to do so. [Note for DM: Apparenly there was an issue with the sight a few months ago when hackers broke into the hosting companies servers, but it should have been fixed now - Google just takes a while to update its records. Haven't really updated the sight for about three years now, which is why I haven't been taking much notice of it.]

    nelletap:

    One of the interesting aspects I have noticed is that diagrams are rarely given in older papers.  When I was young we listened to radio and I am sure that skill made it easier for students to conjure up the diagram described by the text.  To-days questions more often have the diagrams but often there is a lot of less crucial text dressing up the maths and for dyslexics, for example, who can be good at Maths, the additional, often confusing text means they need high literacy to be able to demonstrate their maths skills.  I first taught Maths in 1972 so have seen quite a lot of changes!

    Yes, I agree that past papers were definitely much more 'celebral' requiring the ability to parse the language and use it to build and manipulate mental pictures, in a way perhaps akin to playing blindfold chess. All great training for the mind, but seems to have all but disappeared these days.

    Best wishes,

    Sabbir.

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    190
    Posted by: Betamale 11/01/2011 at 05:34
    Joined on 31/07/2010
    Posts 518

    nelletap:

    I have a couple of books at least I think probably from the 1970s (early) but possibly from when I took them  (1966/1967/1968 were my years for O level, then additional O then A level).  However, am busy with Bett this week and will probably forget about you in all that rush.  I will try to share with you after this week.  Not sure how to share email so we can pass on the details off list.

     

    One of the interesting aspects I have noticed is that diagrams are rarely given in older papers.  When I was young we listened to radio and I am sure that skill made it easier for students to conjure up the diagram described by the text.  To-days questions more often have the diagrams but often there is a lot of less crucial text dressing up the maths and for dyslexics, for example, who can be good at Maths, the additional, often confusing text means they need high literacy to be able to demonstrate their maths skills.  I first taught Maths in 1972 so have seen quite a lot of changes!

     

    Tricia

    Hi Tricia,

    Would be great if you manage this at some point.

    You can host the pdf at a basic hosting site and link it.

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