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Mathematics
Form 4 2025
TERM III
School


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WK LSN TOPIC SUB-TOPIC OBJECTIVES T/L ACTIVITIES T/L AIDS REFERENCE REMARKS
2 1
Linear Programming
Introduction to Linear Programming
By the end of the lesson, the learner should be able to:

-Understand the concept of optimization in real life
-Identify decision variables in practical situations
-Recognize constraints and objective functions
-Understand applications of linear programming

-Discuss resource allocation problems in daily life
-Identify optimization scenarios in business and farming
-Introduce decision-making with limited resources
-Use simple examples from student experiences
Exercise books
-Manila paper
-Real-life examples
-Chalk/markers
KLB Secondary Mathematics Form 4, Pages 165-167
2 2
Linear Programming
Forming Linear Inequalities from Word Problems
By the end of the lesson, the learner should be able to:

-Translate real-world constraints into mathematical inequalities
-Identify decision variables in word problems
-Form inequalities from resource limitations
-Use correct mathematical notation for constraints

-Work through farmer's crop planning problem
-Practice translating budget constraints into inequalities
-Form inequalities from production capacity limits
-Use Kenyan business examples for relevance
Exercise books
-Manila paper
-Local business examples
-Agricultural scenarios
KLB Secondary Mathematics Form 4, Pages 165-167
2 3-4
Linear Programming
Types of Constraints
Objective Functions
By the end of the lesson, the learner should be able to:

-Identify non-negativity constraints
-Understand resource constraints and their implications
-Form demand and supply constraints
-Apply constraint formation to various industries

-Define objective functions for maximization problems
-Define objective functions for minimization problems
-Understand profit, cost, and other objective measures
-Connect objective functions to real-world goals

-Practice with non-negativity constraints (x ≥ 0, y ≥ 0)
-Form material and labor constraints
-Apply to manufacturing and service industries
-Use school resource allocation examples

-Form profit maximization functions
-Create cost minimization functions
-Practice with revenue and efficiency objectives
-Apply to business and production scenarios
Exercise books
-Manila paper
-Industry examples
-School scenarios
Exercise books
-Manila paper
-Business examples
-Production scenarios
KLB Secondary Mathematics Form 4, Pages 165-167
2 5
Linear Programming
Complete Problem Formulation
By the end of the lesson, the learner should be able to:

-Combine constraints and objective functions
-Write complete linear programming problems
-Check formulation for completeness and correctness
-Apply systematic approach to problem setup

-Work through complete problem formulation process
-Practice with multiple constraint types
-Verify problem setup using logical reasoning
-Apply to comprehensive business scenarios
Exercise books
-Manila paper
-Complete examples
-Systematic templates
KLB Secondary Mathematics Form 4, Pages 165-167
2 6
Linear Programming
Introduction to Graphical Solution Method
By the end of the lesson, the learner should be able to:

-Understand graphical representation of inequalities
-Plot constraint lines on coordinate plane
-Identify feasible and infeasible regions
-Understand boundary lines and their significance

-Plot simple inequality x + y ≤ 10 on graph
-Shade feasible regions systematically
-Distinguish between ≤ and < inequalities
-Practice with multiple examples on manila paper
Exercise books
-Manila paper
-Rulers
-Colored pencils
KLB Secondary Mathematics Form 4, Pages 166-172
2 7
Linear Programming
Plotting Multiple Constraints
By the end of the lesson, the learner should be able to:

-Plot multiple inequalities on same graph
-Find intersection of constraint lines
-Identify feasible region bounded by multiple constraints
-Handle cases with no feasible solution

-Plot system of 3-4 constraints simultaneously
-Find intersection points of constraint lines
-Identify and shade final feasible region
-Discuss unbounded and empty feasible regions
Exercise books
-Manila paper
-Rulers
-Different colored pencils
KLB Secondary Mathematics Form 4, Pages 166-172
3 1
Linear Programming
Properties of Feasible Regions
By the end of the lesson, the learner should be able to:

-Understand that feasible region is convex
-Identify corner points (vertices) of feasible region
-Understand significance of corner points
-Calculate coordinates of corner points

-Identify all corner points of feasible region
-Calculate intersection points algebraically
-Verify corner points satisfy all constraints
-Understand why corner points are important
Exercise books
-Manila paper
-Calculators
-Algebraic methods
KLB Secondary Mathematics Form 4, Pages 166-172
3 2
Linear Programming
Properties of Feasible Regions
By the end of the lesson, the learner should be able to:

-Understand that feasible region is convex
-Identify corner points (vertices) of feasible region
-Understand significance of corner points
-Calculate coordinates of corner points

-Identify all corner points of feasible region
-Calculate intersection points algebraically
-Verify corner points satisfy all constraints
-Understand why corner points are important
Exercise books
-Manila paper
-Calculators
-Algebraic methods
KLB Secondary Mathematics Form 4, Pages 166-172
3 3-4
Linear Programming
Introduction to Optimization
The Corner Point Method
By the end of the lesson, the learner should be able to:

-Understand concept of optimal solution
-Recognize that optimal solution occurs at corner points
-Learn to evaluate objective function at corner points
-Compare values to find maximum or minimum

-Apply systematic corner point evaluation method
-Create organized tables for corner point analysis
-Identify optimal corner point efficiently
-Handle cases with multiple optimal solutions

-Evaluate objective function at each corner point
-Compare values to identify optimal solution
-Practice with both maximization and minimization
-Verify optimal solution satisfies all constraints

-Create systematic evaluation table
-Work through corner point method step-by-step
-Practice with various objective functions
-Identify and handle tie cases
Exercise books
-Manila paper
-Calculators
-Evaluation tables
Exercise books
-Manila paper
-Evaluation templates
-Systematic approach
KLB Secondary Mathematics Form 4, Pages 172-176
3 5
Linear Programming
The Iso-Profit/Iso-Cost Line Method
By the end of the lesson, the learner should be able to:

-Understand concept of iso-profit and iso-cost lines
-Draw family of parallel objective function lines
-Use slope to find optimal point graphically
-Apply sliding line method for optimization

-Draw iso-profit lines for given objective function
-Show family of parallel lines with different values
-Find optimal point by sliding line to extreme position
-Practice with both maximization and minimization
Exercise books
-Manila paper
-Rulers
-Sliding technique
KLB Secondary Mathematics Form 4, Pages 172-176
3 6
Linear Programming
Comparing Solution Methods
By the end of the lesson, the learner should be able to:

-Compare corner point and iso-line methods
-Understand when each method is most efficient
-Verify solutions using both methods
-Choose appropriate method for different problems

-Solve same problem using both methods
-Compare efficiency and accuracy of methods
-Practice method selection based on problem type
-Verify consistency of results
Exercise books
-Manila paper
-Method comparison
-Verification examples
KLB Secondary Mathematics Form 4, Pages 172-176
3 7
Linear Programming
Integration
Business Applications - Production Planning
Introduction to Reverse Differentiation
By the end of the lesson, the learner should be able to:

-Apply linear programming to production problems
-Solve manufacturing optimization problems
-Handle resource allocation in production
-Apply to Kenyan manufacturing scenarios

-Solve factory production optimization problem
-Apply to textile or food processing examples
-Use local manufacturing scenarios
-Calculate optimal production mix
Exercise books
-Manila paper
-Manufacturing examples
-Kenyan industry data
Graph papers
-Differentiation charts
-Exercise books
-Function examples
KLB Secondary Mathematics Form 4, Pages 172-176
4 1
Integration
Basic Integration Rules - Power Functions
Integration of Polynomial Functions
By the end of the lesson, the learner should be able to:

-Apply power rule for integration: ∫xⁿ dx = xⁿ⁺¹/(n+1) + c
-Understand the constant of integration and why it's necessary
-Integrate simple power functions where n ≠ -1
-Practice with positive, negative, and fractional powers

-Derivation of power rule through reverse differentiation
-Multiple examples with different values of n
-Explanation of arbitrary constant using family of curves
-Practice exercises with various power functions
-Common mistakes discussion and correction
Calculators
-Graph papers
-Power rule charts
-Exercise books
-Algebraic worksheets
-Polynomial examples
KLB Secondary Mathematics Form 4, Pages 223-225
4 2
Integration
Finding Particular Solutions
By the end of the lesson, the learner should be able to:

-Use initial conditions to find specific values of constant c
-Solve problems involving boundary conditions
-Apply integration to find equations of curves
-Distinguish between general and particular solutions

-Working examples with given initial conditions
-Finding curve equations when gradient function and point are known
-Practice problems from various contexts
-Discussion on why particular solutions are important
-Problem-solving session with curve-finding exercises
Graph papers
-Calculators
-Curve examples
-Exercise books
KLB Secondary Mathematics Form 4, Pages 223-225
4 3-4
Integration
Introduction to Definite Integrals
Evaluating Definite Integrals
Area Under Curves - Single Functions
Areas Below X-axis and Mixed Regions
By the end of the lesson, the learner should be able to:

-Define definite integrals using limit notation
-Understand the difference between definite and indefinite integrals
-Learn proper notation: ∫ₐᵇ f(x)dx
-Understand geometric meaning as area under curve

-Understand integration as area calculation tool
-Calculate area between curve and x-axis
-Handle regions bounded by curves and vertical lines
-Apply definite integrals to find exact areas

-Introduction to definite integral concept and notation
-Geometric interpretation using simple curves
-Comparison between ∫f(x)dx and ∫ₐᵇf(x)dx
-Discussion on limits of integration
-Basic examples with simple functions

-Geometric demonstration of area under curves
-Drawing and shading regions on graph paper
-Working examples: area under y = x², y = 2x + 3, etc.
-Comparison with approximation methods from Chapter 9
-Practice finding areas of various regions
Graph papers
-Geometric models
-Integration notation charts
-Calculators
Calculators
-Step-by-step worksheets
-Exercise books
-Evaluation charts
Graph papers
-Curve sketching tools
-Colored pencils
-Calculators
-Area grids
-Curve examples
-Colored materials
-Exercise books
KLB Secondary Mathematics Form 4, Pages 226-228
KLB Secondary Mathematics Form 4, Pages 230-233
4 5
Integration
Paper 1 Revision
Area Between Two Curves
Section I: Short Answer Questions
By the end of the lesson, the learner should be able to:

-Calculate area between two intersecting curves
-Find intersection points as integration limits
-Apply method: Area = ∫ₐᵇ [f(x) - g(x)]dx
-Handle multiple intersection scenarios

-Method for finding curve intersection points
-Working examples: area between y = x² and y = x
-Step-by-step process for area between curves
-Practice with linear and quadratic function pairs
-Advanced examples with multiple intersections
Graph papers
-Equation solving aids
-Calculators
-Colored pencils
-Exercise books
Past Paper 1 exams, Marking Schemes
KLB Secondary Mathematics Form 4, Pages 233-235
4 6
REVISION

Paper 1 Revision
Paper 1 Revision
Section I: Short Answer Questions
Section I: Mixed Question Practice
By the end of the lesson, the learner should be able to:
– practice a variety of short-answer styles – apply problem-solving strategies – build confidence in tackling compulsory questions
Teacher demonstrates approaches Students work in pairs and discuss solutions
Chalkboard, Past Papers, Calculators
Past Papers, Marking Schemes
KLB Math Bk 1–4
paper 1 question paper
4 7
Paper 1 Revision
Section II: Structured Questions
By the end of the lesson, the learner should be able to:
– develop detailed structured responses – organize answers step by step – apply concepts in real-life problem settings
Group brainstorming on selected structured questions Teacher gives feedback on presentation
Past Paper 1s, Marking Schemes
Graph Papers, Geometry Sets, Past Papers
KLB Math Bk 1–4
paper 1 question paper
5 1
paper 2 Revision
Section I: Short Answer Questions
Section I: Short Answer Questions
By the end of the lesson, the learner should be able to:
– attempt compulsory short-answer questions – show clear working for full marks – apply speed and accuracy in solving problems
Students attempt selected questions individually Peer-marking and teacher correction
Past paper 2 exams, Marking Schemes
Chalkboard, Past Papers, Calculators
KLB Math Bk 1–4, paper 2 question paper
5 2
paper 2 Revision
Section I: Mixed Question Practice
Section II: Structured Questions
By the end of the lesson, the learner should be able to:
– integrate knowledge to solve mixed short questions – apply logical reasoning and time management – identify common errors and correct them
Timed practice with mixed short-answer questions Class discussion of solutions
Past Papers, Marking Schemes
Past Paper 2s, Marking Schemes
Students’ Notes, Revision Texts
Paper 2 question paper
5 3-4
paper 2 Revision
Paper 1 Revision
Section II: Structured Questions
Section I: Short Answer Questions
Section I: Short Answer Questions
By the end of the lesson, the learner should be able to:
– practice extended problem solving – interpret and use graphs, diagrams and data – present answers clearly for maximum marks
– attempt compulsory short-answer questions – show clear working for full marks – apply speed and accuracy in solving problems
Students attempt structured questions under timed conditions Peer review and corrections
Students attempt selected questions individually Peer-marking and teacher correction
Graph Papers, Geometry Sets, Past Papers
Past Paper 1 exams, Marking Schemes
Chalkboard, Past Papers, Calculators
KLB Math Bk 1–4
paper 2 question paper
KLB Math Bk 1–4, paper 1 question paper
5 5
Paper 1 Revision
Section I: Mixed Question Practice
Section II: Structured Questions
By the end of the lesson, the learner should be able to:
– integrate knowledge to solve mixed short questions – apply logical reasoning and time management – identify common errors and correct them
Timed practice with mixed short-answer questions Class discussion of solutions
Past Papers, Marking Schemes
Past Paper 1s, Marking Schemes
Students’ Notes, Revision Texts
paper 1 question paper
5 6
Paper 1 Revision
paper 2 Revision
Section II: Structured Questions
Section I: Short Answer Questions
By the end of the lesson, the learner should be able to:
– practice extended problem solving – interpret and use graphs, diagrams and data – present answers clearly for maximum marks
Students attempt structured questions under timed conditions Peer review and corrections
Graph Papers, Geometry Sets, Past Papers
Past paper 2 exams, Marking Schemes
KLB Math Bk 1–4
paper 1 question paper
5 7
paper 2 Revision
Section I: Short Answer Questions
Section I: Mixed Question Practice
By the end of the lesson, the learner should be able to:
– practice a variety of short-answer styles – apply problem-solving strategies – build confidence in tackling compulsory questions
Teacher demonstrates approaches Students work in pairs and discuss solutions
Chalkboard, Past Papers, Calculators
Past Papers, Marking Schemes
KLB Math Bk 1–4
paper 2 question paper
6 1
paper 2 Revision
Section II: Structured Questions
By the end of the lesson, the learner should be able to:
– develop detailed structured responses – organize answers step by step – apply concepts in real-life problem settings
Group brainstorming on selected structured questions Teacher gives feedback on presentation
Past Paper 2s, Marking Schemes
Graph Papers, Geometry Sets, Past Papers
KLB Math Bk 1–4
paper 2 question paper
6 2
Paper 1 Revision
Section I: Short Answer Questions
Section I: Short Answer Questions
By the end of the lesson, the learner should be able to:
– attempt compulsory short-answer questions – show clear working for full marks – apply speed and accuracy in solving problems
Students attempt selected questions individually Peer-marking and teacher correction
Past Paper 1 exams, Marking Schemes
Chalkboard, Past Papers, Calculators
KLB Math Bk 1–4, paper 1 question paper
6 3-4
Paper 1 Revision
Section I: Mixed Question Practice
Section II: Structured Questions
By the end of the lesson, the learner should be able to:
– integrate knowledge to solve mixed short questions – apply logical reasoning and time management – identify common errors and correct them
– practice extended problem solving – interpret and use graphs, diagrams and data – present answers clearly for maximum marks
Timed practice with mixed short-answer questions Class discussion of solutions
Students attempt structured questions under timed conditions Peer review and corrections
Past Papers, Marking Schemes
Past Paper 1s, Marking Schemes
Graph Papers, Geometry Sets, Past Papers
Students’ Notes, Revision Texts
paper 1 question paper
KLB Math Bk 1–4
paper 1 question paper
6 5
paper 2 Revision
Section I: Short Answer Questions
Section I: Short Answer Questions
By the end of the lesson, the learner should be able to:
– attempt compulsory short-answer questions – show clear working for full marks – apply speed and accuracy in solving problems
Students attempt selected questions individually Peer-marking and teacher correction
Past paper 2 exams, Marking Schemes
Chalkboard, Past Papers, Calculators
KLB Math Bk 1–4, paper 2 question paper
6 6
paper 2 Revision
Section I: Mixed Question Practice
Section II: Structured Questions
By the end of the lesson, the learner should be able to:
– integrate knowledge to solve mixed short questions – apply logical reasoning and time management – identify common errors and correct them
Timed practice with mixed short-answer questions Class discussion of solutions
Past Papers, Marking Schemes
Past Paper 2s, Marking Schemes
Students’ Notes, Revision Texts
Paper 2 question paper
6 7
paper 2 Revision
Paper 1 Revision
Section II: Structured Questions
Section I: Short Answer Questions
By the end of the lesson, the learner should be able to:
– practice extended problem solving – interpret and use graphs, diagrams and data – present answers clearly for maximum marks
Students attempt structured questions under timed conditions Peer review and corrections
Graph Papers, Geometry Sets, Past Papers
Past Paper 1 exams, Marking Schemes
KLB Math Bk 1–4
paper 2 question paper
7 1
Paper 1 Revision
Section I: Short Answer Questions
Section I: Mixed Question Practice
By the end of the lesson, the learner should be able to:
– practice a variety of short-answer styles – apply problem-solving strategies – build confidence in tackling compulsory questions
Teacher demonstrates approaches Students work in pairs and discuss solutions
Chalkboard, Past Papers, Calculators
Past Papers, Marking Schemes
KLB Math Bk 1–4
paper 1 question paper
7 2
Paper 1 Revision
Section II: Structured Questions
By the end of the lesson, the learner should be able to:
– develop detailed structured responses – organize answers step by step – apply concepts in real-life problem settings
Group brainstorming on selected structured questions Teacher gives feedback on presentation
Past Paper 1s, Marking Schemes
Graph Papers, Geometry Sets, Past Papers
KLB Math Bk 1–4
paper 1 question paper
7 3-4
paper 2 Revision
Section I: Short Answer Questions
Section I: Short Answer Questions
Section I: Mixed Question Practice
Section II: Structured Questions
By the end of the lesson, the learner should be able to:
– attempt compulsory short-answer questions – show clear working for full marks – apply speed and accuracy in solving problems
– integrate knowledge to solve mixed short questions – apply logical reasoning and time management – identify common errors and correct them
Students attempt selected questions individually Peer-marking and teacher correction
Timed practice with mixed short-answer questions Class discussion of solutions
Past paper 2 exams, Marking Schemes
Chalkboard, Past Papers, Calculators
Past Papers, Marking Schemes
Past Paper 2s, Marking Schemes
KLB Math Bk 1–4, paper 2 question paper
Students’ Notes, Revision Texts
Paper 2 question paper
7 5
paper 2 Revision
Section II: Structured Questions
By the end of the lesson, the learner should be able to:
– practice extended problem solving – interpret and use graphs, diagrams and data – present answers clearly for maximum marks
Students attempt structured questions under timed conditions Peer review and corrections
Graph Papers, Geometry Sets, Past Papers
KLB Math Bk 1–4
paper 2 question paper
7 6
Paper 1 Revision
Section I: Short Answer Questions
Section I: Short Answer Questions
By the end of the lesson, the learner should be able to:
– attempt compulsory short-answer questions – show clear working for full marks – apply speed and accuracy in solving problems
Students attempt selected questions individually Peer-marking and teacher correction
Past Paper 1 exams, Marking Schemes
Chalkboard, Past Papers, Calculators
KLB Math Bk 1–4, paper 1 question paper
7 7
Paper 1 Revision
Section I: Mixed Question Practice
Section II: Structured Questions
By the end of the lesson, the learner should be able to:
– integrate knowledge to solve mixed short questions – apply logical reasoning and time management – identify common errors and correct them
Timed practice with mixed short-answer questions Class discussion of solutions
Past Papers, Marking Schemes
Past Paper 1s, Marking Schemes
Students’ Notes, Revision Texts
paper 1 question paper
8 1
Paper 1 Revision
paper 2 Revision
Section II: Structured Questions
Section I: Short Answer Questions
By the end of the lesson, the learner should be able to:
– practice extended problem solving – interpret and use graphs, diagrams and data – present answers clearly for maximum marks
Students attempt structured questions under timed conditions Peer review and corrections
Graph Papers, Geometry Sets, Past Papers
Past paper 2 exams, Marking Schemes
KLB Math Bk 1–4
paper 1 question paper
8 2
paper 2 Revision
Section I: Short Answer Questions
Section I: Mixed Question Practice
By the end of the lesson, the learner should be able to:
– practice a variety of short-answer styles – apply problem-solving strategies – build confidence in tackling compulsory questions
Teacher demonstrates approaches Students work in pairs and discuss solutions
Chalkboard, Past Papers, Calculators
Past Papers, Marking Schemes
KLB Math Bk 1–4
paper 2 question paper
8 3-4
paper 2 Revision
Paper 1 Revision
Section II: Structured Questions
Section I: Short Answer Questions
Section I: Short Answer Questions
By the end of the lesson, the learner should be able to:
– develop detailed structured responses – organize answers step by step – apply concepts in real-life problem settings
– attempt compulsory short-answer questions – show clear working for full marks – apply speed and accuracy in solving problems
Group brainstorming on selected structured questions Teacher gives feedback on presentation
Students attempt selected questions individually Peer-marking and teacher correction
Past Paper 2s, Marking Schemes
Graph Papers, Geometry Sets, Past Papers
Past Paper 1 exams, Marking Schemes
Chalkboard, Past Papers, Calculators
KLB Math Bk 1–4
paper 2 question paper
KLB Math Bk 1–4, paper 1 question paper
8 5
Paper 1 Revision
Section I: Mixed Question Practice
Section II: Structured Questions
By the end of the lesson, the learner should be able to:
– integrate knowledge to solve mixed short questions – apply logical reasoning and time management – identify common errors and correct them
Timed practice with mixed short-answer questions Class discussion of solutions
Past Papers, Marking Schemes
Past Paper 1s, Marking Schemes
Students’ Notes, Revision Texts
paper 1 question paper
8 6
Paper 1 Revision
Section II: Structured Questions
By the end of the lesson, the learner should be able to:
– practice extended problem solving – interpret and use graphs, diagrams and data – present answers clearly for maximum marks
Students attempt structured questions under timed conditions Peer review and corrections
Graph Papers, Geometry Sets, Past Papers
KLB Math Bk 1–4
paper 1 question paper
8 7
paper 2 Revision
Section I: Short Answer Questions
Section I: Short Answer Questions
By the end of the lesson, the learner should be able to:
– attempt compulsory short-answer questions – show clear working for full marks – apply speed and accuracy in solving problems
Students attempt selected questions individually Peer-marking and teacher correction
Past paper 2 exams, Marking Schemes
Chalkboard, Past Papers, Calculators
KLB Math Bk 1–4, paper 2 question paper
9 1
paper 2 Revision
Section I: Mixed Question Practice
Section II: Structured Questions
By the end of the lesson, the learner should be able to:
– integrate knowledge to solve mixed short questions – apply logical reasoning and time management – identify common errors and correct them
Timed practice with mixed short-answer questions Class discussion of solutions
Past Papers, Marking Schemes
Past Paper 2s, Marking Schemes
Students’ Notes, Revision Texts
Paper 2 question paper
9 2
paper 2 Revision
Paper 1 Revision
Section II: Structured Questions
Section I: Short Answer Questions
By the end of the lesson, the learner should be able to:
– practice extended problem solving – interpret and use graphs, diagrams and data – present answers clearly for maximum marks
Students attempt structured questions under timed conditions Peer review and corrections
Graph Papers, Geometry Sets, Past Papers
Past Paper 1 exams, Marking Schemes
KLB Math Bk 1–4
paper 2 question paper
9 3-4
Paper 1 Revision
Section I: Short Answer Questions
Section I: Mixed Question Practice
Section II: Structured Questions
By the end of the lesson, the learner should be able to:
– practice a variety of short-answer styles – apply problem-solving strategies – build confidence in tackling compulsory questions
– develop detailed structured responses – organize answers step by step – apply concepts in real-life problem settings
Teacher demonstrates approaches Students work in pairs and discuss solutions
Group brainstorming on selected structured questions Teacher gives feedback on presentation
Chalkboard, Past Papers, Calculators
Past Papers, Marking Schemes
Past Paper 1s, Marking Schemes
Graph Papers, Geometry Sets, Past Papers
KLB Math Bk 1–4
paper 1 question paper
9 5
paper 2 Revision
Section I: Short Answer Questions
Section I: Short Answer Questions
By the end of the lesson, the learner should be able to:
– attempt compulsory short-answer questions – show clear working for full marks – apply speed and accuracy in solving problems
Students attempt selected questions individually Peer-marking and teacher correction
Past paper 2 exams, Marking Schemes
Chalkboard, Past Papers, Calculators
KLB Math Bk 1–4, paper 2 question paper
9 6
paper 2 Revision
Section I: Mixed Question Practice
Section II: Structured Questions
By the end of the lesson, the learner should be able to:
– integrate knowledge to solve mixed short questions – apply logical reasoning and time management – identify common errors and correct them
Timed practice with mixed short-answer questions Class discussion of solutions
Past Papers, Marking Schemes
Past Paper 2s, Marking Schemes
Students’ Notes, Revision Texts
Paper 2 question paper
9 7
paper 2 Revision
Section II: Structured Questions
By the end of the lesson, the learner should be able to:
– practice extended problem solving – interpret and use graphs, diagrams and data – present answers clearly for maximum marks
Students attempt structured questions under timed conditions Peer review and corrections
Graph Papers, Geometry Sets, Past Papers
KLB Math Bk 1–4
paper 2 question paper
10

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