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Showing posts from September, 2025

Free Online 11+ Maths Tutoring – Open to All

Free Online 11+ Maths Tutoring – Open to All Hi! I’m Rithvik Muthuvelu , a GCSE student at King Edward’s School, Birmingham , and I’m offering free weekly online maths sessions to help students prepare for the 11+ entrance exams . These sessions are open to anyone who wants to improve their maths skills—no school restrictions. What You’ll Get Free weekly online maths classes Focused 11+ preparation : problem-solving, arithmetic, word problems, exam strategies Small-group format for better interaction Ideal for Year 4 and Year 5 students How to Join Weekly Session: Saturdays at 2:00 PM Google Meet Link: https://meet.google.com/nrk-iwmh-gij Contact Email: rithvikmu1@gmail.com If your child is preparing for the 11+ and would like extra support, feel free to join the class or get in touch. Looking forward to helping more students learn and grow! — Rithvik Muthuvelu  

Liam's number

Liam thinks of a number. He multiplies it by 3, then subtracts 5. The result is the same as if he had doubled the number and added 1. What number did Liam think of?

Digits and algebra

A number has two digits. When the digits are reversed, the new number is 27 more than the original number. The sum of the digits is 11. What is the original number?

Tricky Train Journey

A train leaves London at 9:00 a.m. and travels at an average speed of 60 km/h. Another train leaves the same station at 9:30 a.m. and travels at an average speed of 80 km/h, following the same route. At what time will the faster train catch up with the slower one?

What number comes next?

A sequence follows this pattern: 3, 6, 12, 24, ?, 96 What number should replace the question mark?

Word Problem - Time and Speed

A train leaves London at 10:15 AM and travels to Bristol at an average speed of 60 miles per hour. The total distance is 150 miles. At what time does the train arrive in Bristol?

What are the numbers

Three consecutive numbers add up to 111. What are the three numbers?

Mysterious Missing Marbles

Sophie has a box of red, blue, and green marbles. She has twice as many red marbles as green marbles. She has 6 more blue marbles than red marbles. Altogether, she has 54 marbles. How many marbles of each colour does Sophie have?

What is the number?

Look at the following number sequence: 3, 6, 12, 24, ?, 96 What number should replace the question mark?