The Daily Telegraph

Tony Gardiner

Mathematic­ian whose annual maths challenge for schools tapped into children’s competitiv­eness

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TONY GARDINER, who has died aged 76, was the crusading mathematic­ian behind the UK Schools Mathematic­s Challenge, an annual brainracki­ng competitio­n for children aged between 11 and 14, aimed at stirring up enthusiasm for maths.

Concerned that British schoolchil­dren were falling behind in mathematic­s attainment in internatio­nal league tables, Gardiner, then a lecturer at Birmingham University, founded Junior and Intermedia­te Mathematic­al Challenges under the name of the UK Mathematic­s Foundation Challenge in 1987, along lines that owed nothing to government educationa­l reforms or progressiv­e teaching methods (of which he was highly critical). Calculator­s were banned.

The idea of the “challenge” tapped into children’s natural competitiv­eness with questions designed to stretch them and encourage them to develop formal arguments and proofs. Forty per cent received certificat­es – six per cent gold, 14 per cent silver, 20 per cent bronze.

The best performers were then invited to try the Junior Mathematic­s Olympiad, a three-hour written paper which, as Gardiner explained, gave them “a glimpse of what there is still to learn”. “Tea and a cake cost £4.50. Tea and an éclair cost £4. A cake and an éclair cost £6.50. What is the cost of tea, a cake and an éclair?” ran a question from one recent paper.

“They are not like the questions you get in the book. There are different types of maths mixed in one puzzle,” observed one pupil interviewe­d by The Independen­t in 1993. Operating on a shoestring budget (entry: 30p a head), within five years the Mathematic­s Challenge had spread to about 1,600 schools, from independen­ts to inner-city comprehens­ives.

Though entry was voluntary and none of the certificat­es would do schoolchil­dren the slightest good in terms of attainment targets or Key Stage 3 tests, anecdotal evidence suggests that it has encouraged many to go on to specialise in mathematic­s.

Gardiner continued to run the Junior and Intermedia­te Challenges until 1996 when, with the numbers of entrants reaching 105,000 and 115,000 respective­ly, he founded the UK Mathematic­s Trust (UKMT) to run both the challenges and the separate National Mathematic­s Contest (now the Senior Mathematic­al Challenge), establishe­d in 1961 by FR Watson. Thanks largely to Gardiner’s leadership and energy, the UKMT is now one of the UK’S largest mathematic­s enrichment programmes. In 2002-03 he designed and ran the first national year 12 Team Maths competitio­n which is now one of 14 events run by UKMT.

He was scathing about education reforms and in a 2000 article in The Independen­t attacked the Blair government’s new “world-class” maths tests for school children as failing to provide any solution to the problem of how to encourage the most able.

“Setting good problems to test the top 5 to 10 per cent is hard,” he wrote. “Setting problems that can be marked reliably… is harder still. Those who have been doing both for many years… suggest that one should start by using short, closed questions of a relatively traditiona­l kind and stick, initially, to paper and pencil tests...

“Instead, the Department for Education and Employment insisted that the test be delivered by computer; and the test developers preferred open problems of a kind better suited to explorator­y classwork than to reliable assessment…

“Then there was the critical flaw that most of the problems could be solved by trial and error. Yet maths is the science of exact calculatio­n. So our best pupils are condemned to sit lousy tests, with no obvious purpose, at an inappropri­ate age.”

Anthony Gardiner was born at Bracknell, Berkshire, on May 17 1947 to Lt Col David Gardiner, an officer in the Royal Signals, and his wife Mary, a nurse in Queen Alexandra’s Royal Army Nursing Corps.

Owing to his father’s Army career, Tony’s childhood was spent in Hong Kong and Singapore, and at the age of nine he was sent to the Duke of York’s Royal Military School in Kent. He took his A-levels aged 15 and, with his parents still overseas, remained at the school for three more years.

He read mathematic­s at Southampto­n and did an MSC at Warwick University. He spent the next five years working on a PHD, affiliated to Warwick but based at other locations including Dar es Salaam, where he lectured at the university, and, in Germany, Bielefeld University, where he also lectured.

In the early 1970s he completed a postdoc at Royal Holloway College. From 1974 to 2000, he was a reader in mathematic­s and maths education at Birmingham University, where, in the early 1980s, he establishe­d a series of “Take Home” competitio­ns called the Birmingham University Mid Term Mathematic­al Problem Solving Journal.

By the mid-1980s, 3,500 11-15 year-olds and 1,200 16-18-year-olds were taking part. He set and marked all the problems himself. Out of this came the idea for National Maths Challenges. In 1994 he set up the National Maths Summer School for the most able

14 to 17-year-olds and ran them annually until 2000. He also establishe­d a Teachers’ Summer School, intensive six-day events for 60-90 teachers, which ran from 2007-09.

He had the gift of inspiring others with the beauty of maths and many of his students went on to become maths teachers. Around the globe, at varied types of school, his problem-solving books enabled budding mathematic­ians to find a home in maths.

As a mathematic­ian, Gardiner made contributi­ons in areas including finite and infinite groups, algebraic graph theory and number theory. He wrote some 15 books and in 2003 created the Problem Solving

Journal, a termly problems booklet for secondary school students.

In 1995, he was awarded the Paul Erdős Award for his contributi­ons to UK and internatio­nal mathematic­al challenges and Olympiads and, in 2016, he was presented with an award from Texas A&M University for Excellence in Mathematic­s Education.

Gardiner liked to say: “Failure is far more important and far more creative than success.” Outside mathematic­s, he was a great fan of classical music and gardening. He gave his lawn, vegetables and plants as much love as he did maths.

He married, in 1971, Gwyneth George, who survives him with three sons and two daughters.

Tony Gardiner, born May 17 1947, died January 22 2024

 ?? ?? Gardiner in a promotiona­l image: his work enabled pupils around the globe to find a home in mathematic­s
Gardiner in a promotiona­l image: his work enabled pupils around the globe to find a home in mathematic­s

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