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Espressos

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A range of Espressos lying on top of each-other

Espressos

For the last eight years Cambridge Mathematics has been publishing free-to-download Espressos – our small but intense draughts of filtered research on mathematics education, expressly designed with teachers in mind. Each Espresso considers one particular issue in mathematics education, and how the latest good-quality research can provide helpful guidance or further reading. Here are our recommendations for Espressos which could support your use of Ratio Riddles.

For reading aligned with the game-related content of Ratio Riddles

  1. Infographic showing how fractions are a set of intertwined constructs

    Issue 25: Introduction to fractions

    What does research suggest about effective ways to introduce fractions?

    View Espresso 25

  2. Infographic showing Two possible visual representations of proportional reasoning

    Issue 28: Proportional reasoning

    What does research suggest about the development of proportional reasoning in mathematics learning?

    View Espresso 28

  3. Infographic displaying The Overlapping lenses of proportional reasoning

    Issue 36: Developing concepts of ratio

    What does research suggest about developing concepts of ratio?

    View Espresso 36

  4. An infographic displaying Two ways of thinking about division and fractions: Partitioning and Correspondences

    Issue 40: Fraction equivalence

    What does research suggest about the teaching and learning of fraction equivalence?

    View Espresso 40

As you’re a fan of Minecraft, you might also enjoy

  1. Infographic explaining How would you classify the design principles of your digital maths learning resources

    Issue 30: Remote mathematics learning

    What does the research suggest about remote mathematics learning?

    View Espresso 30

  2. Infographic comparing mathematical and computational thinking cycles

    Issue 24: Mathematical and computational thinking

    What are mathematical thinking and computational thinking and what is the relationship between them?

    View Espresso 24

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About Cambridge Mathematics

Cambridge Mathematics is committed to championing and securing a world class mathematics education for all students from 3 – 19 years old, applicable to both national and international contexts and based on evidence from research and practice.

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