Challenging Maths by Ammiel Wan - which grades?
-
Lynn2:
Hi Lynn2,Hi Nicklebee tutors and Brenda10,
Thanks for the details.
May I ask how is the onsponge math books different from andrew er, A star series and top school past year papers?
Thanks again.
Regards,
Lynn2
I would say that for topical revision and day to day work, Simon Eio's Step by Step series would be good to help the kids strengthen their basic mathematical knowledge and build up their knowledge application (mainly Section A and B / Paper 1 work). Its also a great book to help you highlight and pinpoint which areas of your child's maths is still weak and need to be worked on.
Onsponge (and also Fabian Ng's PSP) are more geared towards helping the children learn Problem solving skills, Model Drawing and other Heuristics skills which are essential for Section C / Paper 2 problem sums. I feel that Onsponge has a little more non-routine type of questions as compared to PSP. Both books are packaged in such a way to allow the children to practice each new skill learnt on a few questions of varying difficulty levels. This helps them to understand the methods better as applied to different variations of the question and also help them integrate the methods/skills learnt for long-term usage.
For my students, i prefer to use OnSponge because though both PSP and OnSponge have very well-designed questions, i feel that OnSponge is much more compact and contains just enough questions in each unit to allow the child to practice and integrate one particular skills before moving on. PSP is seriously too thick and meandering and given the large amounts of work, CCA and enrichment classes kids are getting nowadays, its just not practical to expect kids to finish PSP together with the other stacks of assessment books!
Andrew Er Worksheets and Past Year School Exam paper are more for helping the kids to bring together all that they have learnt and applying them in an examination format which has a good mixture of \"Knowledge\" questions, \"Knowledge Application and Comprehension\" questions and lastly the much dreaded \"Higher Order/Heuristics\" Questions.
A* booklets are well recommended and highly regarded for PSLE revision with several top schools using it for their Pri 6 students. In my personal opinion, unless the child is already getting Band 1s or A*s regularly, i would caution against making the child jump straight in without building up his foundations properly. Just a side note, my student who's in the NJC Intergrated Programme told me that her school SCGS (Pri) used the A* Booklets during her PSLE year (2007). However the teachers did not use it for the next batch because even the students there found it too difficult. That's what she told me so could anyone help me confirm if it is true?
Yours
Zhou Shicai
NickleBee Tutors -
Brenda10:
Thank you for the update. Much appreciated!Tinkerbelle:
Thanks NickleBee Tutors for sharing your views on Onsponge. Will also check out the new book you mentioned. Tks.
Thank you for introducing this new book. Went to Popular yesterday and they said so far the book released up to P4 level, as for P5 and P6 are not out yet. Hopefully don't need to wait too long.
Yours
Zhou Shicai
NickleBee Tutors -
Hi Nicklebee tutors,
Thanks for your reply.
Can I ask, does simon eio book helps in particular to questions from section b?We usually practise it from past year paper.How does it helps as comapred to using past year papers?
Via my experience, past year papers seem not enough to cover all section b kind of questions.
For A STAR math, I heard the questions are good and am not sure cos I yet to see onsponge math.
Regards
Lynn2NickleBee Tutors:
Hi Lynn2,Lynn2:
Hi Nicklebee tutors and Brenda10,
Thanks for the details.
May I ask how is the onsponge math books different from andrew er, A star series and top school past year papers?
Thanks again.
Regards,
Lynn2
I would say that for topical revision and day to day work, Simon Eio's Step by Step series would be good to help the kids strengthen their basic mathematical knowledge and build up their knowledge application (mainly Section A and B work). Its also a great book to help you highlight and pinpoint which areas of your child's maths is still weak and need to be worked on.
Onsponge (and also Fabian Ng's PSP) are more geared towards helping the children learn Problem solving skills, Model Drawing and other Heuristics skills which are essential for Section C problem sums. I feel that Onsponge has a little more non-routine type of questions as compared to PSP. Both books are packaged in such a way to allow the children to practice each new skill learnt on a few questions of varying difficulty levels. This helps them to understand the methods better as applied to different variations of the question and also help them integrate the methods/skills learnt for long-term usage.
For my students, i prefer to use OnSponge because though both PSP and OnSponge have very well-designed questions, i feel that OnSponge is much more compact and contains just enough questions in each unit to allow the child to practice and integrate one particular skills before moving on. PSP is seriously too thick and meandering and given the large amounts of work, CCA and enrichment classes kids are getting nowadays, its just not practical to expect kids to finish PSP together with the other stacks of assessment books!
Andrew Er Worksheets and Past Year School Exam paper are more for helping the kids to bring together all that they have learnt and applying them in an examination format which has a good mixture of \"Knowledge\" questions, \"Knowledge Application and Comprehension\" questions and lastly the much dreaded \"Higher Order/Heuristics\" Questions.
A* booklets are well recommended and highly regarded for PSLE revision with several top schools using it for their Pri 6 students. In my personal opinion, unless the child is already getting Band 1s or A*s regularly, i would caution against making the child jump straight in without building up his foundations properly. Just a side note, my student who's in the NJC Intergrated Programme told me that her school SCGS (Pri) used the A* Booklets during her PSLE year (2007). However the teachers did not use it for the next batch because even the students there found it too difficult. That's what she told me so could anyone help me confirm if it is true?
Yours
Zhou Shicai -
Hello,
I need some help here.
I lost the answer key to this (orange) book ie Challenging Maths Problems Made Easy by Ammiel Wan Chee Hong.
Any kind soul willing to email me the answer key, PLEASE ?
Thanking you in advance.
Cheers,
Belle. -
where do you stay?
If you are nearby in the east, i can lend it to you cos i dont have a scanner at home.
rgds
LynnBelle2011:
Hello,
I need some help here.
I lost the answer key to this (orange) book ie Challenging Maths Problems Made Easy by Ammiel Wan Chee Hong.
Any kind soul willing to email me the answer key, PLEASE ?
Thanking you in advance.
Cheers,
Belle. -
Lynn2:
Dear Lynn,where do you stay?
If you are nearby in the east, i can lend it to you cos i dont have a scanner at home.
rgds
Lynn
Thank-you for your help.
I live in the north. It is ok and hope some kind soul can scan and email me, though I know am asking too much. I am just trying my luck here.
Thank-you.
Cheers,
Belle. -
Anyone heard of Notewordhy or Noteworthy Math ? Looking for the book but could not find in Popular. Thanks
-
NickleBee Tutors:
Thank you NickleBee for giving us such a clear picture how to strike a balance toward the preparation of PSLE Maths questions on Section A, B and C.
I would say that for topical revision and day to day work, Simon Eio's Step by Step series would be good to help the kids strengthen their basic mathematical knowledge and build up their knowledge application (mainly Section A and B work). Its also a great book to help you highlight and pinpoint which areas of your child's maths is still weak and need to be worked on.
Onsponge (and also Fabian Ng's PSP) are more geared towards helping the children learn Problem solving skills, Model Drawing and other Heuristics skills which are essential for Section C problem sums. I feel that Onsponge has a little more non-routine type of questions as compared to PSP. Both books are packaged in such a way to allow the children to practice each new skill learnt on a few questions of varying difficulty levels. This helps them to understand the methods better as applied to different variations of the question and also help them integrate the methods/skills learnt for long-term usage.
For my students, i prefer to use OnSponge because though both PSP and OnSponge have very well-designed questions, i feel that OnSponge is much more compact and contains just enough questions in each unit to allow the child to practice and integrate one particular skills before moving on. PSP is seriously too thick and meandering and given the large amounts of work, CCA and enrichment classes kids are getting nowadays, its just not practical to expect kids to finish PSP together with the other stacks of assessment books!
Andrew Er Worksheets and Past Year School Exam paper are more for helping the kids to bring together all that they have learnt and applying them in an examination format which has a good mixture of \"Knowledge\" questions, \"Knowledge Application and Comprehension\" questions and lastly the much dreaded \"Higher Order/Heuristics\" Questions.
A* booklets are well recommended and highly regarded for PSLE revision with several top schools using it for their Pri 6 students. In my personal opinion, unless the child is already getting Band 1s or A*s regularly, i would caution against making the child jump straight in without building up his foundations properly. Just a side note, my student who's in the NJC Intergrated Programme told me that her school SCGS (Pri) used the A* Booklets during her PSLE year (2007). However the teachers did not use it for the next batch because even the students there found it too difficult. That's what she told me so could anyone help me confirm if it is true?
Yours
Zhou Shicai -
Brenda10:
You're welcome : )
Thank you NickleBee for giving us such a clear picture how to strike a balance toward the preparation of PSLE Maths questions on Section A, B and C.NickleBee Tutors:
I would say that for topical revision and day to day work, Simon Eio's Step by Step series would be good to help the kids strengthen their basic mathematical knowledge and build up their knowledge application (mainly Section A and B work). Its also a great book to help you highlight and pinpoint which areas of your child's maths is still weak and need to be worked on.
Onsponge (and also Fabian Ng's PSP) are more geared towards helping the children learn Problem solving skills, Model Drawing and other Heuristics skills which are essential for Section C problem sums. I feel that Onsponge has a little more non-routine type of questions as compared to PSP. Both books are packaged in such a way to allow the children to practice each new skill learnt on a few questions of varying difficulty levels. This helps them to understand the methods better as applied to different variations of the question and also help them integrate the methods/skills learnt for long-term usage.
For my students, i prefer to use OnSponge because though both PSP and OnSponge have very well-designed questions, i feel that OnSponge is much more compact and contains just enough questions in each unit to allow the child to practice and integrate one particular skills before moving on. PSP is seriously too thick and meandering and given the large amounts of work, CCA and enrichment classes kids are getting nowadays, its just not practical to expect kids to finish PSP together with the other stacks of assessment books!
Andrew Er Worksheets and Past Year School Exam paper are more for helping the kids to bring together all that they have learnt and applying them in an examination format which has a good mixture of \"Knowledge\" questions, \"Knowledge Application and Comprehension\" questions and lastly the much dreaded \"Higher Order/Heuristics\" Questions.
A* booklets are well recommended and highly regarded for PSLE revision with several top schools using it for their Pri 6 students. In my personal opinion, unless the child is already getting Band 1s or A*s regularly, i would caution against making the child jump straight in without building up his foundations properly. Just a side note, my student who's in the NJC Intergrated Programme told me that her school SCGS (Pri) used the A* Booklets during her PSLE year (2007). However the teachers did not use it for the next batch because even the students there found it too difficult. That's what she told me so could anyone help me confirm if it is true?
Yours
Zhou Shicai -
I recommend the new CASCO Mathematics Tutor 5A by Lee Ann Goh for P5 students to do a thorough and rigorous practice to boost their Maths skills.

Hello! It looks like you're interested in this conversation, but you don't have an account yet.
Getting fed up of having to scroll through the same posts each visit? When you register for an account, you'll always come back to exactly where you were before, and choose to be notified of new replies (either via email, or push notification). You'll also be able to save bookmarks and upvote posts to show your appreciation to other community members.
With your input, this post could be even better π
Register Login