
Maths • Year 9 • 50 • 20 students • Created with AI following Aligned with National Curriculum for England
This is lesson 12 of 12 in the unit "Algebra Unleashed: Expressions & Equations". Lesson Title: Applying Algebra to Real-Life Problems Lesson Description: In the final lesson, students will apply their algebraic skills to real-life problems, including motion and financial applications. They will work on projects that require the use of algebraic expressions and equations.
Lesson 12 of 12: "Applying Algebra to Real-Life Problems"
Class: Year 9 (age 13–14)
Duration: 50 minutes
Student Count: 20
Curriculum Focus: KS3 Mathematics – Algebra Strand
Curriculum Reference: National Curriculum in England (KS3 Programme of Study — Algebra)
Key Outcomes for KS3 Algebra:
- Use and interpret algebraic notation (e.g., ab in place of a × b).
- Substitute numerical values into formulae and expressions.
- Solve linear equations in one unknown.
- Model and solve contextual (real-life) problems using algebra.
By the end of the lesson, students will be able to:
Students have completed 11 lessons within this unit. They have:
Activity: "Real Life or Not?"
Teacher reads aloud five scenarios. Students use mini whiteboards to hold up “Real-Life” or “Maths-only”. Examples:
Purpose: To help students distinguish between abstract and applied algebra.
Discuss class answers from starter. Emphasise today’s focus:
Today, you'll be the mathematician, applying algebraic thinking to solve real-life problems, just like engineers, business owners, or logistics planners.
Use two quick examples as hooks:
Connect this back to linear equations and algebraic expressions covered in previous lessons.
Students will work in small groups of 4 (5 groups total), rotating roles: reader, recorder, checker, presenter.
Each group receives a printed Project Brief (choices below), an A3 Problem-Solving Mat, and must work collaboratively to:
Two trains leave cities 300 km apart at different speeds. When will they meet?
A student wants to save up for a new device. They get weekly allowance + occasional babysitting. After how many weeks will they have enough?
A small business sells pizzas. It costs £2.50 to make one. Rent is £200/month. They sell each for £6. How many do they need to sell to break even?
A car uses fuel at 6 miles/litre. If petrol is £1.40/litre, how much will a round trip to Manchester (320 miles total) cost?
A cyclist travels 12 miles uphill at x mph, then 12 miles downhill at (x + 4) mph. Entire trip takes 2.5 hours. What is x?
Encourage students to annotate, question, and peer coach. Use teacher facilitation cues to support groups needing help to form visual representations or organise variables correctly.
Mini-Presentations (1 min per group):
Students share their project findings with the class.
Encourage brief Q&A after each solution.
Teacher-led Summary: Reinforce the connection between mathematical models and real-life problems. Ask:
Include mini “Wow” moments: e.g., how the same equation structure can represent both train collisions and business profit calculations!
Students complete a sticky note answering:
Collect for assessment insight.
For Support:
For Extension:
Optional Home Challenge:
Think of a real-life problem you could solve with algebra. Write a short paragraph describing the problem. Try to write an expression or equation to model it.
By crafting real-world problem solvers, this final lesson gives Year 9 students a taste of why algebra matters and sets the stage for deep problem-solving in KS4.
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