Are you looking for an easy way to get your Key Stage 2 kids to learn maths when they have to stay at home?

Home school doesn't have to be boring: play awesome number bingo, make chocolate crispy cakes with the ingredient ratios, build a 3D pyramid, create your own unique tessellation masterpiece, and much more!

With over 30 fantastic activities, extraordinary facts and stats and cool illustrations, this amazing STEM book will inspire children aged 8 and over to become top notch number crunchers!

The STEM editorial consultant is Georgette Yakman, founding researcher and creator of the integrative STEAM framework.

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An activity book designed to engage and entertain young minds, with challenges, quizzes and do-at-home experiments.
Introduction to STEM and maths * Adding and Subtraction * Multiplying and Division * Positive and Negative Numbers * Prime Numbers and Powers * Sequences * Fractions * Decimals * Percentages * Ratios * Factors and Multiples * Measurements * Triangles * Trigonometry * Pythagoras' Theorem * Circles * 2D Shapes * 3D Shapes * Perimeter, Area and Volume * Reflection, Rotation and Translation * Tessellation * Angles * Coordinates * Algebra and Formulas * Data * Line Graphs and Bar Charts, Pie Charts and Venn Diagrams * Rational and Irrational Numbers * Money and Interest * Averages * Probability * Index.
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An inspiring new activity book designed to engage and entertain young minds, with incredible challenges, quizzes and do-at-home experiments.

Produktdetaljer

ISBN
9781783123490
Publisert
2018
Utgiver
Vendor
Welbeck Children's Books
Vekt
320 gr
Høyde
264 mm
Bredde
214 mm
Dybde
4 mm
Aldersnivå
J, E, 02, 04
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Heftet
Antall sider
80

Forfatter

Om bidragsyterne

Colin Stuart has written more than half a dozen science books and over 150 popular science titles for publications including The New Scientist, BBC Focus and the European Space Agency. Colin is also a science speaker who talks to tens of thousands of people about astronomy every year, ranging from schools to conferences and businesses. He is a Fellow of the Royal Astronomical Society and in 2014 he was awarded runner-up in the European Astronomy Journalism Prize.