Filters
Clear allSubject
- Careers (1) Apply Careers filter
- Computing (2) Apply Computing filter
- Cross curricular (3) Apply Cross curricular filter
- Design and technology (6) Apply Design and technology filter
- Engineering (6) Apply Engineering filter
- Leadership (1) Apply Leadership filter
- Mathematics (5) Apply Mathematics filter
- Personal development (1) Apply Personal development filter
- STEM Clubs (1) Apply STEM Clubs filter
Age range
Type
- Activity sheet (10) Apply Activity sheet filter
- Article (1) Apply Article filter
- Assessment (3) Apply Assessment filter
- Group work (1) Apply Group work filter
- Information sheet (3) Apply Information sheet filter
- Open-ended task (1) Apply Open-ended task filter
- Poster (1) Apply Poster filter
- Presentation (1) Apply Presentation filter
- Research (2) Apply Research filter
- Self assessment (1) Apply Self assessment filter
- (-) Remove Teacher guidance filter Teacher guidance
- Video (6) Apply Video filter
- (-) Remove Include Physical Resources filter Include Physical Resources
Showing 39 results
This was the first National Curriculum for Science in England and Wales. One intention of the National Curriculum was that all students aged 5 to 16 learn science – that there should be ‘Science for All’ – and that this should include both the ‘methods of science’ and the acquisition of ‘knowledge and understanding...
This revision of the National Curriculum was an attempt to simplify the 1989 version, and to make assessment more manageable.
*The 17 Attainment Targets (AT) were reduced to four – with these divided into ‘strands’.
*Fewer Statements of Attainment: the number was approximately halved by broadening...
This revision of the National Curriculum builds on the 1991 version and follows Sir Ron Dearing’s 1993 review of the whole National Curriculum.
*It retains the four Attainment Targets (AT), each with an associated Programme of Study (PoS), although AT1 becomes ‘Experimental and investigative science’, and...
The National Curriculum for science, published in 1999. Compared with the 1995 version of the National Curriculum, the main changes are:
*There is a statement about the ‘Importance of Science’.
*The ‘Experimental and investigative science’ sections are renamed ‘Scientific enquiry’, with an emphasis on a...
This version of the National Curriculum was written to include only changes to the Key Stage Four Programme of Study (PoS) which would be first assessed in 2006. The Attainment Targets (AT) and PoS for Key Stages One, Two and Three did not change at this time. At Key Stage Four, the following overall changes were...
A useful handbook for setting up a student-led STEM club, with exemplars from three schools.
It is increasingly recognised that giving students opportunities to act as ambassadors and mentors for STEM subjects outside of school can be of great benefit to the individual, their institution, and to the broader...
Ofsted is the Office for Standards in Education, Children’s Services and Skills. They regulate and inspect to achieve excellence in the care of children and young people, and in education and skills for learners of all ages.
The Education and Inspections Act, which established the new Ofsted, specifically...
The aim of the Children’s Learning in Science Project (CLIS) was to discover how to use a constructivist approach to teach selected topics, and translate this into materials which could be used by teachers.
...
In this activity children take on the role of Earth observation scientists submitting a request for an image they would like for their research. This gives them the opportunity to consider the possibilities of pictures taken from orbit (and the limitations) and to write scientifically for a specific audience. It...
Pages
- « first
- ‹ previous
- 1
- 2
- 3