Maths schemes of work
I’ve used several maths schemes of work over the years and thought I’d make a summary post of them here, incase anyone was interested! Although planning your own maths lessons from scratch forms the basis of your maths planning/teaching during your teacher training, after you qualify there’s a wealth of supportive schemes to help with coverage and depth in maths teaching and learning.
Hamilton Trust
I’ve used both year 1-2 maths plans and year 2/3 maths planning from Hamilton Trust which provides lots of resources/worksheets for every lesson and does cover the entire curriculum over the course of the year. They are great for maths fluency and have some good activities to get children fluent in maths skills.
My main issues with using Hamilton plans though are that occassionally the content for mixed year planning doesn’t match up, so it feels like you are teaching 2 different lessons! (Especially with the cross key stage year 2/3 plans…) Also their plans aren’t that great for showing verbal reasoning or problem solving, key areas in the new curriculum especially in reagrds to greater depth in mathematics. Also although some sample plans are free, Hamilton Trust is a subscription service (albeit a reasonably priced one).
White Rose Maths Hub
White Rose have just updated their scheme for the 2017-18 year and they are now so much better than before! Lots of key information that covers all curriculum objectives complete with specifc questions that relate to fluency, verbal reasoning and problem solving for each key objective (which this time also includes the answers, yay).
White Rose provides enough to get you started, but it isn’t a full planning scheme with lessons. However, it is a great starting point and I often use their example fluency, verbal reasoning and problem solving questions to assess my class’s ability at the end of a block.
AET Maths
AET provide very detailed medium term plans and links to some great resources for maths from reception to GCSE level! Each topic is broken down into micro steps for children to learn and gives advice in how teachers could teach each topic. Best of all for me, this scheme has blocks of lesson objectives that match up when teaching a mixed age class, hooray!
Downsides of AET are that you have to sift through the wealth of information to find what you really need and there are few lesson by lesson type plans availible for free.
Twinkl Plan-it
I finally bought Twinkl with a Planit subscription included this year and I have not regretted it! Their plan-it lessons (especially for maths) are well crafted, follow the objectives and give you between 2 and 6 lesson plans and complete kit of resources for every learning objective in the primary national curriculum! Lots of the activities are really quite inventive, and my class have really enjoyed the ones I have given to them so far (the number hunting one we did last week went down an absolute treat!)
Only downsides of Planit really are the cost (£70 upfront for a years subscription), but it’s only the third week of term and twinkl have already saved me hours, so the scheme is worth its weight in gold really.
Other schemes
Other schemes I have used briefly or heard about are Rising Stars, Abacus, Singapore Maths and Big Maths. I’ve used Rising Stars maths assessments which were okay, but very narrowly focused and I’ve used Big Maths weekly “Beat That” tests which are good, but a little repetitive.
This year with my new bunch of year 2/3s, I’m using AET maths medium term plans, with some twinkl planit lessons for a bit of variety/fun and White Rose questions to help the kids get to greater depth. I’ll let you know if this mix works!
If anyone has used/knows about another useful maths scheme, then let me know and I’ll add it to this post :)












