• Sums of Anarchy: Why Maths Isn’t the Problem – How We Teach It Is
    Jan 27 2026

    In this episode of The Primary Maths Podcast, Jon is joined by Sums of Anarchy co-founder Dominique Miranda to explore why so many people decide early on that maths “isn’t for them” – and what we can do about it.

    Dominique shares her own journey from academic success through memorisation to realising, at university level, that understanding matters far more than recall. Together, Jon and Dominique unpack how early classroom experiences shape long-term confidence, why maths anxiety sticks for decades, and how cultural attitudes make it socially acceptable to opt out of maths altogether.

    The conversation digs into the power of representations, colour, and visual thinking, drawing on Sums of Anarchy’s distinctive approach to making abstract ideas tangible. They explore times tables, fractions, curriculum sequencing, and the fine line between helpful shortcuts and hollow “tricks”.

    Crucially, the episode reframes maths not as a set of procedures to follow, but as a way of thinking – a tool for knowing what to do when there isn’t a rule to apply. For teachers, leaders, and parents alike, this is a thoughtful discussion about how maths can become something learners participate in, rather than something they endure.

    Guest Bio

    Dominique Miranda is the cofounder of Sums of Anarchy, a platform dedicated to making maths fun and accessible to learners of all ages. Through their videos on social media and their range of books, courses and resources, they’re on a mission to kindle positive relationships with maths. Dominique has a Masters degree in Maths and Languages from UCL, and over ten years of tutoring experience, from early years to A-Level, as well as coaching teachers for the maths element of their teacher training exams. She now brings that experience to millions of people around the world, sharing fun tips and tricks for calculation, demystifying mathematical concepts, and telling the stories behind the numbers.

    https://www.sumsofanarchy.com/

    https://www.instagram.com/sumsofanarchy

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    54 mins
  • AfterMaths: Scaffolding, Contactless Cash and 11 Missing Days
    Jan 23 2026

    In this week’s Aftermaths, Jon and Becky unpick two words that are everywhere right now — scaffolding and adaptations — and ask whether we’re accidentally reinventing differentiation under a new name. Then we share listener stories about children’s “money logic” (including the belief that you can simply tap your phone to summon infinite dinosaurs). Finally, Jon takes us down a brilliant history rabbit hole: the year Britain “lost” 11 days when the calendar changed — and we round off with quick takeaways from this week’s interview on problem solving.

    In this episode
    1. Scaffolding vs adaptations: what scaffolding is (temporary, for everyone, faded), and what it isn’t (a permanent crutch or a euphemism for tiered tasks).
    2. A construction-site analogy for scaffolding — and why “for all” matters if we care about access and equity.
    3. Money follow-up: three listener stories that reveal how children can misunderstand money in a contactless world (“Santa pays for the expensive stuff”, “just tap your phone”, and “free cash”).
    4. History of maths / time mystery: how Britain ended up going to bed on 2 September 1752 and waking up on 14 September 1752 — and why it links back to Julian vs Gregorian calendars (and a March New Year).
    5. Problem solving takeaways from this week’s interview episode (Tom Manners & Steve Lomax): mindset, collaboration/communication before “strategies”, and the power of noticing and wondering — even when it’s hard to “evidence” in the moment.

    Key takeaways
    1. Scaffolding should help learners reach the maths — then be removed. If the support becomes the method, we’ve stolen the thinking.
    2. Not all support is scaffolding. Some needs require specific adaptations, but that’s different from whole-class scaffolds designed into instruction.
    3. Children’s money misconceptions are completely rational given what they see: money as a tap, a beep, or a sign that literally says “free cash”.
    4. Problem solving grows from culture as much as content: curiosity, talk, and collaborative habits aren’t bolt-ons — they’re prerequisites.

    Mentioned / coming up
    1. Next Tuesday’s interview: Dominique from “Sums of Anarchy” on engaging pupils in maths — worth checking out her content ahead of the episode.

    Get in touch

    Share your best child logic (money or otherwise), or tell us what “scaffolding” looks like in your school: primarymathspodcast@twinkl.co.uk (Twinkl without the “e”).

    If you enjoyed the episode…

    Follow/subscribe, leave a rating, and (on YouTube) like the video — it really helps more teachers and leaders find the show.

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    48 mins
  • Problem Solving Isn’t a Task -with Steve Lomax & Tom Manners
    Jan 20 2026

    Problem solving is one of those phrases we all use in maths – but do we actually mean the same thing when we say it?

    Too often, it becomes shorthand for a set of word problems at the end of a lesson, or a Friday afternoon activity once the “real maths” is done. But what if problem solving isn’t a type of task at all? What if it’s a way of thinking, behaving, and approaching mathematics – something that needs to be explicitly taught, modelled, and valued every day?

    In this episode of The Primary Maths Podcast, I’m joined by Steve Lomax and Tom Manners for a wide-ranging conversation about what problem solving really is, and why so many pupils struggle with unfamiliar problems even when the maths content itself is secure.

    We explore:

    • the difference between giving children problems and teaching them how to be problem solvers
    • why problem solving cannot be reduced to word problems or strategy posters
    • the role of mathematical habits such as noticing, conjecturing, visualising, tinkering, and pattern spotting
    • how metacognition and teacher modelling shape pupils’ willingness to have a go
    • why curriculum design, classroom culture, and time allocation matter more than quick fixes
    • how SATs, fluency, and mastery are often misunderstood in relation to problem solving

    We also discuss resilience, safe classroom environments, cognitive diversity, and why struggle, when handled well, is not something to be avoided but something to be taught through.

    About the guests

    Steve Lomax has worked with headteachers, subject leaders, teachers, and pupils for over thirty years. He has held roles including Senior Lead for the GLOW Maths Hub, SCITT Maths Lead, Mathematics Adviser for Gloucestershire, AST, and SLE. Steve is also an NPQ and ECF Facilitator for the Balcarras Teaching School Hub. He co-founded CanDoMaths and is passionate about fostering inclusive “can do” attitudes so that all children can enjoy and achieve in mathematics.

    Tom Manners works in school improvement across several roles, including Trust Maths Lead and Evidence Lead in Education for the Education Endowment Foundation. He is an NCETM PD Lead and Teaching for Mastery Specialist through the Central Maths Hub. Alongside this, Tom trains new teachers as a PGCE Tutor at Arthur Terry SCITT and Associate Lecturer for Birmingham City University. He also supports schools on a freelance basis and shares his writing and resources online.

    Get in touch

    If you have thoughts on this episode, questions you would like us to explore, or ideas for future guests or themes, email the show at primarymathspodcast@twinkl.co.uk

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    1 hr and 16 mins
  • AfterMaths: Money, Maths and the Cost of Making Learning Passive
    Jan 16 2026

    In this week’s Aftermaths episode of The Primary Maths Podcast, Jon and Becky cover a lot of ground — from coins and contactless payments to SATs survival tips, curriculum updates, and why talking about maths might matter more than writing it down.

    🎒 Money in the modern classroom

    Jon and Becky take a light-hearted but thoughtful look at how money is taught in primary schools, and why it’s become trickier in recent years. With children encountering less physical cash in everyday life, money has become more abstract — even as it remains one of the richest areas of maths for problem solving.

    They explore:

    • Why British coins form a non-linear system
    • How money quietly introduces additive, multiplicative, decimal, and equivalence structures
    • Why money lessons need to be hands-on, not worksheet-heavy
    • How school trips, chaos and all, create some of the most memorable maths learning moments

    Along the way, expect stories involving mint Matchmakers, ice lollies, and burning holes in pockets.

    💷 Money and financial education

    The conversation broadens into financial education, touching on fairness, budgeting, and decision-making — and why a secure understanding of money is foundational. Jon and Becky highlight the value of discussion-rich resources, including Twinkl’s work with Santander, that prioritise justification, talk, and real-world choices.

    📚 Curriculum drafters: what we know so far

    The newly announced maths curriculum drafters are discussed, with reflections on:

    • Familiar names from maths education
    • The scale and complexity of the task ahead
    • The importance of consultation with the profession
    • What teachers might hope to see as the process unfolds

    🧮 SATs tips from the classroom

    Listeners share practical (and reassuring) SATs insights, including:

    • Why children don’t have to answer arithmetic questions in order
    • How reading questions aloud can boost confidence and outcomes
    • Ways schools reduce stress through flexible test arrangements
    • A tongue-in-cheek reflection on the “magic week” of teaching long division

    🔤 Etymathsology: words we use, meanings we forget

    Becky dives into the origins of words like integer, digit, numeral, and figure, revealing how small language choices can cause big confusion — especially in tests — and why using precise vocabulary regularly really matters.

    🧠 Research in 60-ish seconds

    Jon summarises new research exploring whether pupils learn more by speaking or writing learning journals. The headline finding?

    Spoken reflection may support deeper understanding and better retention — especially for learners who find writing a barrier.

    🔍 Big takeaway

    Across money, language, SATs, and research, one message keeps resurfacing:

    Maths lessons are at their best when pupils are actively doing maths - thinking, talking, noticing, and exploring - rather than watching it happen.

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    43 mins
  • What Year 6 Teachers Should (and Shouldn’t) Be Doing for SATs Right Now
    Jan 13 2026

    SATs season can feel overwhelming — especially in Year 6. In this special interview-style episode, Jon is joined by Becky Brown to talk honestly and practically about how to prepare pupils for KS2 Maths SATs without turning the rest of the school year into one long revision session.

    Recorded in January, this episode focuses on what really matters from now until May, and why SATs should be seen as a culmination of a key stage, not a last-minute scramble owned by Year 6 teachers alone.

    In this episode, we explore:
    • Why SATs are a Key Stage 2 assessment, not a Year 6 curriculum
    • What to prioritise from January onwards (and what not to panic about)
    • How to use arithmetic practice strategically without narrowing teaching
    • When and how to use past papers effectively — and when to avoid them
    • The importance of question-level analysis, not endless test practice
    • Teaching test technique without undermining good maths habits
    • How to support pupils currently working below expected standard
    • Making intervention purposeful, human, and confidence-building
    • Why “greater depth” in SATs isn’t about different content
    • Supporting pupils’ wellbeing and confidence alongside preparation
    • Common mistakes schools make — and what to do instead

    Jon also shares reflections from over a decade of teaching Year 6, including what he would (and wouldn’t) do differently, while Becky brings the perspective of intervention, marking insight, and secondary readiness.

    Recommended resources mentioned:
    • Twinkl’s SATs Survival Hub
    • Half-length and topic-specific maths practice papers
    • Concept videos and structured intervention programmes
    • Test technique guidance and revision planning tools

    Get involved

    Have you found something that works particularly well in your school during the run-up to SATs?

    Jon and Becky would love to share community wisdom in a future Aftermaths episode.

    📩 Email: primarymathspodcast@twinkl.co.uk

    💬 Or leave a comment on YouTube — tips welcome!

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    51 mins
  • AfterMaths: Resolutions, Routines & Reality in the Classroom
    Jan 9 2026

    In the first Aftermaths episode of 2026, Jon and Becky reflect on New Year resolutions, why so many of them fail, and what this means for teachers specifically. Drawing on national data, Teacher Tap insights, and lived classroom experience, they explore wellbeing, workload, work–life boundaries, and the gap between good intentions and sustainable habits.

    The episode also features a Maths of Life moment inspired by a freezing trip to Weston-super-Mare, leading into a fascinating discussion about tides, lunar days, and why the sea sometimes feels impossibly far away.

    Finally, Jon and Becky debrief this week’s interview with secondary maths teacher Emma Lockhart, unpacking ideas about maths identity, gender, confidence, and how early classroom experiences shape long-term attitudes to maths.

    Key themes covered
    • Why Quitter’s Day exists – and what the data tells us about resolutions
    • How teachers’ resolutions differ from national trends
    • Health, wellbeing, and boundaries in a profession under pressure
    • Work–life balance: emails, notifications, and protecting time
    • Maths of Life: tides, lunar days, and extreme tidal ranges
    • Maths identity, confidence, and who feels “allowed” to be good at maths
    • Why primary classrooms matter so much for long-term maths attitudes

    Maths of Life

    A winter trip to the coast sparks a deep dive into:

    • Tidal ranges and why Weston-super-Mare looks so different at low tide
    • The concept of a lunar day (24 hours 50 minutes)
    • Why tides don’t follow our neat 24-hour clock

    Also discussed
    • Reflections on the interview with Emma Lockhart
    • Gender, confidence, and internalising mistakes in maths
    • How classroom culture influences whether pupils persist with maths

    Get involved

    Have you ever kept (or spectacularly abandoned) a New Year resolution?

    We’d love to hear your stories.

    📧 Email: primarymathspodcast@twinkl.co.uk

    👍 Subscribe, rate, and review to help us reach more teachers

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    38 mins
  • How Maths Lessons Can Lose Confident Learners - with Emma Lockhart
    Jan 6 2026

    Why is maths one of the few subjects people feel completely comfortable saying they hated at school?

    In this episode of The Primary Maths Podcast, Jon is joined by Emma Lockhart, Head of Maths at Mill Hill School, to explore what really sits behind that narrative and why it disproportionately affects girls.

    Together, they unpack how maths so quickly becomes framed as something you are either “good at” or “bad at”, and how confidence, belonging and belief often matter just as much as content knowledge or exam technique. The conversation looks at what happens to pupils who are capable but quietly opt out, how classroom language and expectations shape mathematical identity, and why maths anxiety is often rooted in culture rather than ability.

    Although this is the Primary Maths Podcast, the discussion moves into the secondary classroom and beyond, offering insights that are just as relevant for Key Stage 2 teachers, maths leads and school leaders as they are for those working at GCSE level.

    In this episode, we explore:
    • Why maths attracts such strong negative identities compared to other subjects
    • The idea of the “quiet opt-out” and how capable pupils disengage without being noticed
    • Gender, confidence and why girls are more likely to internalise “I’m just not a maths person”
    • How right-and-wrong classroom cultures can undermine belonging
    • What primary teachers can take from secondary insights to protect confidence earlier
    • Practical reflections on language, expectations and mathematical identity

    This is a thoughtful, reflective conversation about maths as a social experience, not just an academic one.

    If you enjoyed this episode, please consider liking, subscribing, and leaving a review. It really helps more teachers and leaders find the podcast.

    Get in touch with the show. Email primarymathspodcast@twinkl.co.uk

    Get in touch with Jon Cripwell: https://www.linkedin.com/in/joncripwell/

    Get in touch with Emma Lockhart: https://www.linkedin.com/in/emma-lockhart-74755431b/

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    44 mins
  • AfterMaths: Christmas by the Numbers- A Festive Aftermaths Special
    Dec 23 2025

    Christmas Is Just One Long Maths Problem (A Festive Aftermaths)

    There’s no interview this week, no school talk, and absolutely no mention of lesson objectives.

    Instead, Jon and Becky settle in for a festive Aftermaths special — a lighter, reflective end-of-term episode full of Christmas maths, curious statistics, questionable guesses, and the kind of conversations you can happily listen to while wrapping presents or hiding in the kitchen for five minutes of peace.

    From debating whether Die Hard really is a Christmas film, to exploring how many calories we might consume on Christmas Day, this episode is a gentle reminder that maths has a habit of sneaking into life — even when school is firmly off the table.

    Along the way, Jon shares festive statistics on charity giving, travel, food, drink, and Christmas traditions, while Becky brings some Christmas-themed world records, including the most successful Christmas movie of all time, the best-selling festive song ever, and one spectacularly tall Christmas tree.

    There’s plenty of laughter, a few wild guesses (especially involving measurement), and more than enough festive maths to fuel a Christmas quiz or two.

    As we wrap up the year, it’s also a chance to say a huge thank you to everyone who’s listened to the podcast in 2025 — with one final roundup episode still to come before we head into 2026.

    🎄 Merry Christmas from The Primary Maths Podcast.

    ⏱️ In this episode:
    • Is Die Hard actually a Christmas film?
    • Festive generosity and charity by the numbers
    • Christmas Day calories, timing, and traditions
    • Travel maths at the busiest time of year
    • The highest-grossing Christmas film ever
    • The best-selling Christmas song of all time
    • One extremely tall Christmas tree (and some extremely bold guesses)

    ⭐ Enjoying the podcast?

    If you’re feeling generous this Christmas, a quick rating or review on your podcast platform would be the perfect festive gift.

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    34 mins