At Rainford CE, we believe that every child can master an understanding and love of maths with the right kind of teaching and support. Mathematics teaches children how to make sense of the world around them through developing their ability to calculate fluently, reason, and solve problems, as well as enabling them to understand relationships and patterns in both number and space in the world around them. We want to build our pupils’ cultural capital so that by the time they leave us in Year 6, they are fully prepared for future learning, employment and everyday life. Through our curriculum, we instil a mathematical respect and understanding in all our pupils so they are deeply aware of the essential role of maths in everyday life, particularly financial literacy, as well as its critical relationship with science, technology and engineering.
Furthermore, the design of our Maths Curriculum allows pupils to develop and embed meta-cognition, problem-solving, and co-operative learning skills, all of which are essential for sustainable, successful future learning across all subjects. Our curriculum provides a rich variety of mathematical opportunities to explore, take risks, and take the lead in exploring mathematical concepts, thus ensuring all our children develop into confident, inquisitive mathematicians who are not afraid to take risks and who have secure mathematical foundations with an interest in self-improvement. Every classroom provides a safe environment in which mathematical thinking is valued and encouraged, so that pupils can follow a line of enquiry, conjecture relationships and generalisations, and develop an argument, justification or proof using mathematical language.
The aims for teaching Mathematics at Rainford CE Primary School are:
Our Curriculum directly supports the following intent of the National Curriculum, in particular the belief that all pupils deserve the same high-quality, ambitious learning.
Maths No Problem forms the basis of our Maths Curriculum at Rainford CE for all children from EYFS to Year 6. It provides a coherent progression in maths objectives across the school, which is used by teachers to plan maths lessons. Teaching progresses through the MNP chapters, in which there are clear end points fully aligned with the National Curriculum. Although chapters are organised into apparently distinct domains, in accordance with the National Curriculum Programme of Study, there is high emphasis on application across domains to allow pupils to make rich connections across mathematical ideas to develop fluency, mathematical reasoning and competence in solving increasingly sophisticated problems.
MNP is founded on expert learning theory, in particular Jerome Bruner’s Concrete, Pictorial, Abstract approach. This lies at the heart of MNP as it builds on a learner’s existing knowledge by introducing abstract concepts in a concrete and tangible way. The MNP approach to pedagogy has a built-in progression that supports pupils when they are learning new ideas, starting with the ‘doing’ stage, which uses concrete manipulatives, real-life examples or activities to allow learners to discover the mathematical concepts for themselves. Pupils are then given visuals or they can draw diagrams to represent the same ideas. They are encouraged to visualise the concrete objects or real-life examples and make connections with the pictorial representations. This progression from seeing and then drawing models allows learners to move to the abstract ‘symbolic’ stage where learners have a solid understanding of the concrete and pictorial stages of the problem, strong visualisation skills, and can now access abstract mathematical concepts and use symbols to model problems.
Although we follow the MNP scheme of work, teachers are confident in adapting the scheme to meet the needs of their learners. Teachers must do all of the “key lessons” within the Maths No Problem Curriculum, then they can also add in extra lessons within a topic, which are dependent on pupils’ needs. This learning is evidenced within pupils’ maths journals.
The basics of mathematical fluency – as defined by the KS1/KS2 National Curriculum for maths – involve knowing key mathematical facts and being able to recall them quickly and accurately.
At Rainford CE, we have adapted the daily timetable to incorporate maths sessions around fluency and arithmetic. Teachers use our Rainford CE Arithmetic and Fluency mapping document, alongside the NCETM Ready to Progress Criteria, to plan these sessions.
Times table progression is mapped out in our Arithmetic and Fluency mapping to ensure that every year group has a continued focus on the skills linked to times tables. In LKS2, pupils also complete extra daily times tables practice in preparation for the National Multiplication Check. These sessions are a mixture of teaching and practising times tables, using Times Table Rockstars as one of our resources, as well as Tara Loughlin’s Times Table Games.
Through MNP, Rainford CE Primary School uses a Mastery Approach to learning in Mathematics. The mastery of the Maths Curriculum is something that we want all pupils to acquire. During our daily lessons, we encourage children to ask as well as answer mathematical questions. We develop their ability to independently select and use appropriate concrete apparatus to support their conceptual understanding and build procedural fluency. Therefore, they regularly access and use a wide range of resources, such as number lines, Dienes/Base 10 apparatus, place value counters, multi-links, place value cards and other small apparatus to support their work. We develop the children’s ability to represent problems using visualisation skills, jottings, and pictorial representations such as Empty Number Lines, bar modelling and their own ideas. The daily Maths No Problem focus tasks provide meaningful contexts and encourage the children to apply their learning to everyday situations. At all times, the policy intent is the driver behind the planning and delivery of lessons.
Teaching of Mathematics in Reception at Rainford CE is planned using MNP to ensure that children are exposed to the CPA approach from the very start of their learning journey. This provides our pupils with a sequenced, thorough progression of skills and an opportunity to develop their understanding of number, measurement, pattern, shape and space, through varied activities that allow them to enjoy, explore, practise and talk confidently about maths.