Help

This page will help you to understand what is published on the site and how the maths problems and resources are classified.


The Student Guide tells you what a typical student home page looks like.
The Teacher Guide tells you what a typical teacher's home page looks like.

We also have a technical help page.


Stages and curriculum content

Problems are designed to meet the needs of pupils from 5 to 19. They are classified according to maths curriculum content stage and level of challenge.

The five maths content stages correspond to UK Key Stages, but for international users the following gives an indication of the ages by which the mathematics involved in the problem will usually have been met:

  1. Uses mathematics you would normally meet before the age of 8
  2. Uses mathematics you would normally meet before the age of 11
  3. Uses mathematics you would normally meet before the age of 14
  4. Uses mathematics you would normally meet before the age of 16
  5. Uses mathematics you would normally meet post 16

Some mathematical content is not found in many normal school curricula but this is included at a stage that we feel is appropriate to its application.


Challenge level

The level of maths challenge is indicated by a scale of one, two or three stars.

* Problems that require some initial investigation and planning,
** Problems that extend pupils beyond normal curriculum demands and which challenge students working at the next stage,
*** Very challenging problems.

The chart gives some guidance on which problems may be most appropriate for pupils at various ages and abilities:

Diagram showing appropriate stages


We aim to offer as much flexibility to learners and teachers as possible and to discourage the view that a problem that uses curriculum content at Stage 2 is inappropriate for learners working at stages 3 or 4 (or even 1). There are three main reasons for this:

Problems can have one or more purposes:
Many of the problems on the site have the capacity to be extended well beyond the basic task and should be seen as a starting point for maths investigation and discovery. The notes supplied with new problems give some ideas on mathematical content and potential. Hints are there to support pupils who are finding it hard to get started.

Solutions
We do not include solutions to problems when they are first published but we do encourage students to send us their solutions. We edit and publish extracts from them in the following months.

We will publish the names of  pupils, or groups of pupils, who submit solutions which make a significant contribution to the published edited solution.

We recommend that teachers encourage pupils to submit joint solutions and/or filter solutions before they are sent to us, acknowledging pupils' efforts within the school.