Conference
The SMC conference is a major event in the school year, attracting many teachers with between 20 and 30 workshops on offer. It also serves as a social gathering at which teachers can meet and network with colleagues from other parts of the country.
2026 conference sponsored by 
2026 Conference
The tone for the 2026 conference was set by our keynote speaker, Andy Brown. The conference was held at the University of Stirling on Saturday 16th May. Andy's presentation was very informative and provided delegates with an insight into the ongoing Curriculum Improvement Cycle, access his presentation here . Keep up to date on the CIC website. Curriculum Improvement Cycle – Education Scotland
Andy Brown is currently on secondment as the National Specialist Adviser for Mathematics to the Scottish Government. In this role, Andy bridges policy and practice, working closely with ministers, policy officials, academics, schools and settings, and wider stakeholders.
Andy has been involved in education for over 20 years. He has held roles as a Secondary Teacher of Mathematics, Faculty Head, Depute Head, and Interim Head Teacher of two schools in the Highlands of Scotland. Andy has worked for Education Scotland as a Senior Education Officer of Numeracy and Mathematics and his most recent substantive post was as a Senior Education Officer of Curriculum Innovation. He values his own learning and development as well as others, and has a specific interest in curriculum design, pedagogy, and subject specific professional learning.
Andy was appointed in the first cohort of Fellows of the Academy for the Mathematical Sciences.

We announced the recipient of the SMC Achievement Award 2026 winner, Anne Cockroft.

Anne Cockroft studied mathematics at Nottingham University, and stayed on there to do a PhD in quantum mechanics. She was not persuaded by her three years of post-doc research at Dundee University that that was the way she wanted her career to go. Instead, she became a lecturer in Operational Research and Statistics at Napier College, now Edinburgh Napier University, moving briefly to Nottingham Trent University before settling in at what became the University of the West of Scotland in Paisley. Here she taught degree courses in Mathematical Sciences and Business Analysis as well a variety of service courses.
One day when Anne’s daughter, Erica, was in P6, she brought home the Maths Challenge problems. Erica and her brother, Mark, would go on to tackle these and other national challenges right through to S6. Meanwhile, Anne’s colleague, Elizabeth West, noticed Anne’s enthusiasm for what her children were doing and so she persuaded her to help informally with Section 5.
Anne joined the Maths Challenge Committee in 2002 and took over as Regional Organiser for Section 5 a year later. During this time she worked with Mark to create the marks website which is still in use today. Anne continued as Regional Organiser until just before her retirement in 2009, also serving as secretary of the Maths Challenge Committee from 2014 to 2018. She remains a key member of the National Committee to this day, a quarter of a century after her first involvement with the competition.
Throughout the years of Anne’s involvement with Maths Challenge, Bill Richardson has been the National Organiser, and he comments that Anne is not the sort of committee member who simply attends meetings. She has always had a particular interest in the wording of questions and very often invents alternative solutions which are of great benefit to the marking teams. Anne herself believes that the key to setting Challenge problems is a surprise – an interesting context, a particular way of looking at a problem which makes it easier, a seeming lack of information, or an unexpected answer.
And with Mathematical Challenge in its Golden Jubilee Year, it was perfectly fitting that Bill be on hand to present the Scottish Mathematical Council Achievement Award for 2026 to someone who has served this national competition with such dedication and flair for half its lifetime.
There were also stalls from your favourite publishers, and a host of exciting workshops from the mathematical community. The list of workshops can be seen at SMC Stirling Maths Conference 2026 and slides from several presentations can be accessed below.
The day was closed with a panel session. Panel members were Andy Brown - Scotland's Mathematics Specialist Advisor, Tara Harper - SMC Member and Lecturer in Maths Education at Dundee University and Bryn Jones - Newbattle High School
2025 Conference
We were delighted to welcome Rob Eastaway (https://robeastaway.com/ ) as the keynote speaker of this year's SMC conference, which was held at the University of Stirling on Saturday 17th May. Rob’s easy manner set the tone for the day with his presentation entitled “The Problem with Problem Solving” with his anecdotes which everyone could relate to and created much laughter in the auditorium. Rob is no stranger to speaking in front of people as he has given hundreds of maths talks across the world to audiences of all ages, and puzzles and games are at the centre of many of his maths talks and workshops. He is the author of several bestselling popular maths books, including Why Do Buses Come in Threes? and Maths on the Back on an Envelope and is a regular guest on the BBC Radio 4 programme More or Less.
His latest book, Much Ado About Numbers is on sale now.
We announced the recipient of the SMC Achievement Award 2025 winner, Derek Blackburn. He is pictured below with Chris Smith MBE.

Derek taught Maths in various Glasgow schools from the mid 1970s, finally retiring from Shawlands Academy in 2009.
In his retirement. Derek set up “dlbmaths” on YouTube back in 2012 which (by September 2023) had over 10.6 MILLION views. https://www.youtube.com/@DLBmaths
Derek has provided videos for year after year after year of every question in the SQA Maths exams. These are produced in his own inimitable style- with dry humour and only his hands in view as he explains the Mathematical thinking and process involved to succeed in each. There are hundreds of hours of footage on YouTube and this is the tip of the iceberg when you consider the countless hours preparing, editing and uploading these.
We are blessed with plenty of resources for National 5 Maths and a decent amount for Higher Maths which have been provided freely by generous Maths teachers. Advanced Higher, though, is not as richly provided for. In some schools where only a couple of periods each week are assigned for teaching Advanced Higher, dlbmaths is a lifeline in providing bonus explanations and helpful tips.
Reading through comments in the videos it is clear that Derek’s channel has single-handedly been responsible for dragging some students through National 5, Higher and (particularly) Advanced Higher.
Derek Blackburn does all this under a cloak of anonymity- very few people even know his secret identity – he is the very well deserving recipient of the 2025 Achievement Award. (Derek will be presented with the physical award ASAP)
There were also stalls from your favourite publishers, and a host of exciting workshops from the mathematical community. The list of workshops can be seen at SMC Stirling Maths Conference 2025 and slides from several presentations can be accessed below.
The day was closed with a panel session considering the question "What next for Scottish Education?". The session was chaired by SMC chairman Andrew Wilson. Panel members were Andy Brown - Scotland's Mathematics Specialist Advisor, Holly Drummond EMSM Junior School, Dr Kirsten Fenton ESMS Junior School, Angel Hinkley - Drumchapel High School and Bryn Jones - Newbattle High School
2024 Conference
We were delighted to welcome James Grime (jamesgrime.com) as the plenary speaker of this year's SMC conference,
which was held at the University of Stirling on Saturday 18th May. James was an incredibly popular speaker this year, as evidenced by the number of people who queued at the end of his talk for photos and autographs!
One delegate, Andrew Norby, told us: “He is one of my mathematical heroes so getting to meet him was an honour (even though I did a poor job as his glamorous volunteer assistant for the Hamming Card trick, but he played it cool like the total pro that he is).”

2023 Conference
Almost 200 educators from the length of breadth of Scotland and Scottish Education (and, in some cases, much further afield) were present at the Scottish Mathematical Council conference at the University of Stirling on 20th May.
First order of business for the day was the announcement that Allan Duncan was the recipient of the 2023 SMC Achievement Award (see photo opposite of Allan Duncan (holding his award) and SMC Chair Alan Walker).
The keynote presentation was delivered by Ayliean MacDonald (see below). Ayliean is a former Scottish secondary mathematics teacher who has recently taken up a post as a Community Mathematician in Leeds. Her presentation, "How Maths Teachers Saved My Life", served as a thank you to all mathematics teachers, and a session full to the brim of ideas, activities, and deep personal reflection on the wonders (and pitfalls) of teaching mathematics.
The mathematics community offered 33 workshops in a jam-packed event, and it was excellent to see such a varied offering, fit for primary teachers, secondary teachers, ITE educators and university and college lecturers.
Thanks go to all our presenters, and to the many exhibitors who came to show off the current offerings in terms of technology, pedagogy, and textbooks available to educators today.
Achievement Award
The SMC Achievement Award is presented each year at the SMC Conference. Nominations are welcome at any time.
Nominees should have been involved in mathematics education in Scotland for a significant amount of time and have made a major contribution to the learning and teaching of the subject at primary, secondary or tertiary level either through working directly with pupils or students or by holding a position of influence within a school, college, university, institute of teacher education, local authority, Education Scotland or the Inspectorate.
Previous winners
Anne Cockroft
Anne Cockroft studied mathematics at Nottingham University, and stayed on there to do a PhD in quantum mechanics. She was not persuaded by her three years of post-doc research at Dundee University that that was the way she wanted her career to go. Instead, she became a lecturer in Operational Research and Statistics at Napier…
Derek Blackburn (2025)
Derek taught Maths in various Glasgow schools from the mid 1970s, finally retiring from Shawlands Academy in 2009. In his retirement. Derek set up “dlbmaths” on YouTube back in 2012 which (by September 2023) had over 10.6 MILLION views. https://www.youtube.com/@DLBmaths Derek has provided videos for year after year after year of every question in the…
Chris Pritchard (2024)
Chris has been changing the face of mathematics in Scotland (and beyond) since 1983. Originally from Wales, Chris came to Scotland via a six-year stint in London to accept the post of Principal Teacher of Mathematics at Daliburgh School on the Isle of South Uist. Challenging enough was the adaptation from an inner-city school to…
Allan Duncan (2023)
Upon completing his mathematics degree at Edinburgh University, and his teaching qualification the year after, Allan taught for a short period at Dollar Academy. He then moved to a high school near Lake Victoria in Kenya but three years later he returned to Scotland and quickly moved up the departmental ladder to become PT at…
Sheona Goodall (2022)
The Scottish Mathematical Council Achievement Award was conceived in 2016. It is presented to someone who has been involved in mathematics education in Scotland for a significant length of time, and who has made a major contribution to the learning and teaching of mathematics in that time. The 2022 recipient is Sheona Goodall. Sheona taught…
George Gibson (2021)
George Gibson has been presented with the Scottish Mathematical Council Achievement Award for 2021. Normally the presentation of the glass plaque would have taken place after the opening address at the Annual Conference in Stirling University but with Covid restrictions in place, the conference was held online. SMC Chair, Carol Lyon, described George as a…
Mark Higgins (2020)
Now in its fifth year, the SMC Achievement Award is presented to someone who has made a special and sustained contribution to mathematics education in Scotland. The previous recipients were Adam McBride, Clive Chambers, Maureen McKenna and Brenda Harden. To these names we must now add that of Mark Higgins. Mark rather stumbled into teaching…
Bill Richardson (2020 – Special Recognition Award)
At the SMC Conference in March, Bill Richardson was presented with an engraved glass plaque to mark his 20 years in the role of National Organizer of the Mathematical Challenge, the ever-popular, problem-solving competition that is one of the cornerstones of the SMC’s activities. Upon graduating from the University of Manchester, Bill began his teaching…
Brenda Harden (2019)
Brenda’s career began in Ellon Academy in 1978; she moved to Mackie Academy as APT in 1990, then to Turriff Academy as PT in 2005 and to Northfield Academy as Faculty Head in 2010. She finished up with a brief spell as one of the Depute Heads of Torry Academy, though she is still doing…
Maureen McKenna (2018)
Maureen taught mathematics in three Grampian schools in the early part of her career, moving on to Kilsyth Academy to become Principal Teacher and then Assistant Head Teacher. In 2000, she joined the inspectorate, where she went on to become District Inspector for Glasgow and North Ayrshire, and perhaps more importantly, the national specialist for…
Clive Chambers (2017)
Clive studied mathematics in Dundee, graduated from the University of St Andrews and in 1966 started teaching in Linlathen High School. He stayed at that school for almost a quarter of a century, most of that time as Principal Teacher. Then in 1989 Clive joined Tayside’s Education Development Service and within a couple of years…
Adam McBride (2016)
As an academic mathematician at Strathclyde University, Adam has influenced hundreds if not thousands of young mathematicians. His high standing with his peers has led to his being elected a Fellow of the Royal Society of Edinburgh and also as President of Scotland’s premier forum for mathematicians, the Edinburgh Mathematical Society. But it is for…