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Your one stop shop for primary maths resources

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The Third Space Maths Hub contains hundreds of KS1 and KS2 maths activities, worksheets and games for teachers to use in the classroom. It’s also jam-packed with lots of CPD videos and guides, perfect for primary Senior Leadership teams and NQTs alike.

If you have pupils benefitting from one to one sessions, your whole school will also have access to all the premium resources, activities and videos.

Any staff with access to your school's intervention account will also have a Maths Hub account by default and you'll be able to use the same login details to access both. Staff don’t have to be involved in the one-to-one intervention to benefit from the Maths Hub. Maths Hub accounts can be created here .

All our resources follow a maths mastery approach and are fully aligned with the primary National Curriculum. The Maths Hub contains a range of fluency, reasoning and problem-solving resources.

Not sure where to start? Here are our most popular primary maths resources:

Fluent in Five for Years 1-6

Rapid Reasoning for Year 3-6

Watch this video on how to make the most of your Maths Hub account

I'm trying to log onto the intervention but i'm stuck on the maths hub. what do i do.

You will be able to see if you have access to the intervention when you log into the Maths Hub. If you do, you will see an ‘Interventions’ button alongside the log out button.

third space learning fluency reasoning and problem solving

If you can't see this, the Lead Teacher at your school can grant you access. If you have had a Maths Hub account in the past, your account will need to be given full access to all features of Third Space Learning.

Your Lead Teacher will need to follow these steps:

Log on to their Third Space Learning account

Go to staff at the top of the page

Click Grant Access next to your name

third space learning fluency reasoning and problem solving

When you log into the Maths Hub, you will see the 'Interventions' button, if you cannot see the intervention button, try logging in via app.thirdspacelearning.com

Watch this video on how to access the Interventions platform via the Maths Hub

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Fluency, reasoning and problem solving in primary maths

Primary maths, australia and new zealand, tes resources team.

Primary Maths, Maths Mastery, Fluency, Reasoning, Problem Solving, Ks1 Maths,ks2 Maths, White Rose Maths Hub, Mathematics Mastery

Develop fluency, reasoning and problem solving within any topic as part of a mastery approach

The skills of fluency, reasoning and problem solving are well-known to all primary maths teachers. In mastery teaching , they play an essential role in helping pupils to gain a deeper understanding of a topic. But what does this look like in practice?

For more information on mastery, check out this  handy introduction .

Firstly, problem solving is at the heart of mastering maths. While there is nothing new about using problem-solving questions to consolidate understanding, mastery gets teachers to rethink the traditional lengthy word-problem format. Instead, problem-solving questions are often open-ended, with more than one right answer. 

Problem solving is an important skill for all ages and abilities and, as such, needs to be taught explicitly. It is therefore useful to have challenges like these at the end of every lesson.

Secondly, verbal reasoning demonstrates that pupils understand the maths. Talk is an integral part of mastery as it encourages students to reason, justify and explain their thinking. This is tricky for many teachers who are not used to focusing on verbal reasoning in their maths lessons. You might, for example, get young learners to voice their thought processes. Older students could take part in class debates, giving them the space to challenge their peers using logical reasoning.

Introducing scaffolded sentence structures when talking about maths gives pupils the confidence to communicate their ideas clearly, before writing them down. A mastery classroom should never be a quiet classroom.

Finally, fluency, reasoning and problem solving underpins the deepening of understanding. Fluency alone doesn’t give students the chance to delve deeper into the mathematics. They may well be able to answer the questions, but can they also justify their answer or explore other possibilities?

Typically, teachers start new topics by developing fluency in order to give learners confidence with the skill. However, sometimes starting with a problem-solving question – eg, Prove that 4+3=7 – deepens understanding sooner. How? Pupils have to be reliant on resources they’ve used elsewhere, such as concrete manipulatives and pictorial representations, to help them explain the maths.

When planning, try not to get hung up on whether an activity focuses on either reasoning or problem solving as often it is a combination. Instead, turn your attention to using these types of questions to secure fluency and ensure that all children move beyond it into a world of deeper understanding.

Fluency, reasoning and problem solving in your classroom

Embedding these concepts into your everyday teaching can take time so patience is key! Mastery specialists recommend being more fluid with your planning and investing more time in making resources that will allow you to be reactionary to progress made in the lessons.

We’ve hand-picked these useful ideas to get you started:

This blog post was written with grateful thanks to Jenny Lewis, Primary Maths Specialist at the White Rose Maths Hub, and Helen Williams, Director of Primary at Mathematics Mastery, for their insights.

Want to know more about primary maths mastery? Check out our collection of free resources, quality assured by mastery experts and helpfully mapped by topic to year groups and learning objectives.

Building fluency through problem solving

an orange square, a blue square, and a green square with a multiplication symbol, an addition symbol, and a division symbol inside respectively

Editor’s Note:

This is an updated version of a blog post published on January 13, 2020.

Problem solving builds fluency and fluency builds problem solving. How can you help learners make the most of this virtuous cycle and achieve mastery?

Fluency. It’s so important that I have written not one , not two , but three blog posts on the subject. It’s also one of the three key aims for the national curriculum.

It’s a common dilemma. Learners need opportunities to apply their knowledge in solving problems and reasoning (the other two NC aims), but can’t reason or solve problems until they’ve achieved a certain level of fluency.

Instead of seeing this as a catch-22, think of fluency and problem solving as a virtuous cycle — working together to help learners achieve true mastery.

Supporting fluency when solving problems

Fluency helps children spot patterns, make conjectures, test them out, create generalisations, and make connections between different areas of their learning — the true skills of working mathematically. When learners can work mathematically, they’re better equipped to solve problems.

But what if learners are not totally fluent? Can they still solve problems? With the right support, problem solving helps learners develop their fluency, which makes them better at problem solving, which develops fluency


Here are ways you can support your learners’ fluency journey.

Don’t worry about rapid recall

What does it mean to be fluent? Fluency means that learners are able to recall and use facts in a way that is accurate, efficient, reliable, flexible and fluid. But that doesn’t mean that good mathematicians need to have super-speedy recall of facts either.

Putting pressure on learners to recall facts in timed tests can negatively affect their ability to solve problems. Research shows that for about one-third of students, the onset of timed testing is the beginning of maths anxiety . Not only is maths anxiety upsetting for learners, it robs them of working memory and makes maths even harder.

Just because it takes a learner a little longer to recall or work out a fact, doesn’t mean the way they’re working isn’t becoming accurate, efficient, reliable, flexible and fluid. Fluent doesn’t always mean fast, and every time a learner gets to the answer (even if it takes a while), they embed the learning a little more.

Give learners time to think and reason

Psychologist Daniel Willingham describes memory as “the residue of thought”. If you want your learners to become fluent, you need to give them opportunities to think and reason. You can do this by looking for ways to extend problems so that learners have more to think about.

Here’s an example: what is 6 × 7 ? You could ask your learners for the answer and move on, but why stop there? If learners know that 6 × 7 = 42 , how many other related facts can they work out from this? Or if they don’t know 6 × 7 , ask them to work it out using facts they do know, like (5 × 7) + (1 × 7) , or (6 × 6) + (1 × 6) ?

Spending time exploring problems helps learners to build fluency in number sense, recognise patterns and see connections, and visualise — the three key components of problem solving.

Developing problem solving when building fluency

Learners with strong problem-solving skills can move flexibly between different representations, recognising and showing the links between them. They identify the merits of different strategies, and choose from a range of different approaches to find the one most appropriate for the maths problem at hand.

So, what type of problems should you give learners when they are still building their fluency? The best problem-solving questions exist in a Goldilocks Zone; the problems are hard enough to make learners think, but not so hard that they fail to learn anything.

Here’s how to give them opportunities to develop problem solving.

Centre problems around familiar topics

Learners can develop their problem-solving skills if they’re actively taught them and are given opportunities to put them into practice. When our aim is to develop problem-solving skills, it’s important that the mathematical content isn’t too challenging.

Asking learners to activate their problem-solving skills while applying new learning makes the level of difficulty too high. Keep problems centred around familiar topics (this can even be content taught as long ago as two years previously).

Not only does choosing familiar topics help learners practice their problem-solving skills, revisiting topics will also improve their fluency.

Keep the focus on problem solving, not calculation

What do you want learners to notice when solving a problem? If the focus is developing problem-solving skills, then the takeaway should be the method used to answer the question.

If the numbers involved in a problem are ‘nasty’, learners might spend their limited working memory on calculating and lose sight of the problem. Chances are they’ll have issues recalling the way they solved the problem. On top of that, they’ll learn nothing about problem-solving strategies.

It’s important to make sure that learners have a fluent recall of the facts needed to solve the problem. This way, they can focus on actually solving it rather than struggling to recall facts. To understand the underlying problem-solving strategies, learners need to have the processing capacity to spot patterns and make connections.

The ultimate goal of teaching mathematics is to create thinkers. Making the most of the fluency virtuous cycle helps learners to do so much more than just recall facts and memorise procedures. In time, your learners will be able to work fluently, make connections, solve problems, and become true mathematical thinkers.

Jo Boaler (2014). Research Suggests that Timed Tests Cause Math Anxiety. Teaching Children Mathematics , 20(8), p.469.

Willingham, D. (2009). Why don’t students like school?: A Cognitive Scientist Answers Questions About How the Mind Works and What It Means for Your Classroom. San Francisco: Jossey-Bass.

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COMMENTS

  1. Fluency, Reasoning and Problem Solving: What ...

    In that paper he produces this pyramid: This is important for two reasons: 1) It splits up reasoning skills and problem solving into two different entities. 2) It demonstrates that fluency is not something to be rushed through to get to the 'problem solving' stage but is rather the foundation of problem solving.

  2. PDF Your Guide to Using Rapid Reasoning

    Third Space Learning's Fluent in Five resource, which provides daily fluency practice. Rapid Reasoning has been carefully structured with progression through the KS2 curriculum in mind. As you work through the activities, pupils will gradually learn new ... Effective problem-solving and reasoning skills have also been shown to be the key to

  3. What is the Third Space Maths Hub?

    The Third Space Maths Hub contains hundreds of KS1 and KS2 maths activities, worksheets and games for teachers to use in the classroom. It's also jam-packed with lots of CPD videos and guides, perfect for primary Senior Leadership teams and NQTs alike. If you have pupils benefitting from one to one sessions, your whole school will also have ...

  4. Let's Investigate KS2

    Develop pupils' fluency, reasoning and problem solving skills with over 24 multi-step Maths investigations designed for Years 5 and 6. ... Third Space Learning Frazer House, 32-38 Leman Street, London E1 8EW. 0203 771 0095. [email protected]. Facebook. Twitter.

  5. The Ultimate Guide to Problem Solving Techniques

    9 ready-to-go problem solving techniques that every classroom should have. Printable tasks for pupils, short explanations for teachers. Essential for helping pupils gain confidence in approaching new problems individually in KS2 Maths. Year 1, Year 2, Year 3, Year 4, Year 5, Year 6. Mixed Topic.

  6. Stop what you're doing! We've got...

    Stop what you're doing! We've got a blog post that you may be interested in: Fluency, Reasoning and Problem Solving: What These Look Like In Lessons...

  7. Problem Solving, Reasoning and Planning for Depth

    Outline the importance of problem solving and reasoning, including the benefits of both; Explore some practical strategies; Clarify the principles of how to plan for problem solving and reasoning. ... Third Space Learning Frazer House, 32-38 Leman Street, London E1 8EW. 0203 771 0095. [email protected]. Facebook. Twitter. Data ...

  8. Fluency, reasoning and problem solving in primary maths

    Develop fluency, reasoning and problem solving within any topic as part of a mastery approach The skills of fluency, reasoning and problem solving are well-known to all primary maths teachers. In mastery teaching, they play an essential role in helping pupils to gain a deeper understanding of a topic. But what does this look like in practice?

  9. Fluency, reasoning and problem...

    Fluency, reasoning and problem solving are central to the maths national curriculum for primary schools. That's why Neil Almond, primary school lead...

  10. Third Space Learning

    At Third Space Learning, we're on a mission to help all students feel confident with maths. Whatever you and your school need to get there, we've got you covered with: đŸ”č Free primary maths ...

  11. Stop what you're doing! We've got...

    Stop what you're doing! We've got a new blog post that you may be interested in: Fluency, Reasoning and Problem Solving: What These Look Like In...

  12. Build maths fluency with a virtuous cycle of problem solving

    The ultimate goal of teaching mathematics is to create thinkers. Making the most of the fluency virtuous cycle helps learners to do so much more than just recall facts and memorise procedures. In time, your learners will be able to work fluently, make connections, solve problems, and become true mathematical thinkers. References. Jo Boaler (2014).

  13. Let's Investigate (KS2 Maths) ...

    Let's Investigate (KS2 Maths) Develop pupils' fluency, reasoning and problem-solving skills with a range of multi-step investigations. Get your ...

  14. Word Problems Year 6 Division

    Help your pupils apply their understanding of division to an unfamiliar context using these worded problems. 11 questions to develop reasoning and problem solving skills. This worksheet contains 10 division questions of ascending difficulty plus one challenge question. An answer sheet is included. This worksheet covers the following:

  15. Symmetry

    Human-like automatic deductive reasoning has always been one of the most challenging open problems in the interdisciplinary field of mathematics and artificial intelligence. This paper is the third in a series of our works. We built a neural-symbolic system, named FGeo-DRL, to automatically perform human-like geometric deductive reasoning. The neural part is an AI agent based on deep ...

  16. Word Problems Year 3 Place Value

    Help your pupils apply their understanding of place value to an unfamiliar context using these worded problems. 11 questions to develop reasoning and problem solving skills. This worksheet contains 10 place value questions of ascending difficulty plus one challenge question. An answer sheet is included. This worksheet covers the following: