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Lewis, Fay; Edmonds, Juliet; Fogg-Rogers, Laura – Primary Science, 2019
Engineers are vital to the way we live, our everyday experiences and activities, but despite this engineering receives little focus in the primary classroom. Interest in STEM (science, technology, engineering and mathematics) wanes as children reach the end of primary school. However, providing positive experiences can keep the doors open for…
Descriptors: STEM Education, Engineering, Elementary School Science, Design
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Pringle, Tom – Primary Science, 2019
'Wow' is a teaching tool. It is not just a way to grab attention but, correctly used, a means to enhance children's understanding and improve retention. Wow leads to why. In this why state pupils experience the 'vacuum of ignorance': they know they don't know, they know that the teacher does know (usually) and they want the teacher to fill that…
Descriptors: Teaching Methods, Attention, Science Activities, Student Experience
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Rushworth, Christine – Primary Science, 2020
In this article, the author, a teacher at Cookridge Primary School in Leeds, West Yorkshire, reflects on the teaching of science from reception across the year groups. To really compare and understand the differences of teaching science in early years, the author looks at its place in the progression of science throughout primary school. The…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Elementary School Students, Elementary School Science, Science Process Skills
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Robinson, Linda – Primary Science, 2017
The learning of science keeps evolving, just like the subject of science itself. With this in mind, teachers know the importance of keeping up to date and researching different ways of providing a rich learning experience for children. Teachers are developing not only children's learning, but how they progress as learners. This is where Tony…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Science Instruction, Teaching Methods, Elementary School Science
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Mahony, Emily – Primary Science, 2015
Planning for and teaching somebody else's class can be a daunting process, especially for a trainee teacher like the author, who still has to gain all the knowledge and experience of managing a group of 36 10- and 11-year-olds. As part of her degree studies, the author had to plan, with a group of other trainee teachers, a series of lessons on…
Descriptors: Lesson Plans, Food, Nutrition Instruction, Microbiology
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Sath, Hajra – Primary Science, 2018
Although science is a core subject, educators at Uphall Primary School have found in recent times pupils do not display the same enthusiasm for science as they do for other subjects. In order to raise the pupils' science capital and generate an eagerness among the pupils to experiment, learn and develop their curiosity about the world around them,…
Descriptors: Elementary School Students, Video Technology, Computer Mediated Communication, Science Process Skills
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Myers, Debbie; McGrory, Maria; Westgate, Cathy – Primary Science, 2016
The best science teaching can be identified as that which sets out to support pupils' natural curiosity by equipping them with the investigative skills to make sense of the world around them. This requires a change in the way teachers think and also requires visionary leadership, agency, reflection, and enactment by participating teachers. This…
Descriptors: Science Education, Science Instruction, Children, Inquiry
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Strachan, Amy – Primary Science, 2015
We cannot expect every child to leave primary school with the aspiration of becoming a scientist. It is, however, achievable for children to move through their education seeing the implications of science in everything we do. Questioning, predicting, interpreting data, drawing conclusions, communicating evidence and evaluating procedures are all…
Descriptors: Science Instruction, Elementary School Science, Scientific Concepts, Concept Formation
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Davenport, Carol – Primary Science, 2015
Changes in the National Curriculum for England in 2014 included the introduction of levers, gears, and pulleys into primary science. Although simple mechanisms had been part of the design and technology (DT) curriculum for some time, it was the first time that the science behind the mechanisms had been included at the primary school level. These…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, National Curriculum, Science Curriculum, Elementary School Science
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Goldsworthy, Anne – Primary Science, 2013
Many teachers seem to have followed the "dunking theory." That is, they dunk their children in a variety of investigations and hope that through their practical work they will absorb a thorough understanding of enquiry skills. Children seem to have quite a good natural waterproof coating when it comes to absorbing scientific skills through…
Descriptors: Science Instruction, Inquiry, Hands on Science, Science Process Skills
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Serin, Gokhan – Primary Science, 2014
Introducing concepts through an integrated science, technology, engineering and mathematics (STEM) approach can promote interest and motivation (Bennett, Lubben and Hogarth, 2007; Bybee, 2010). However, implementing such an approach effectively in a classroom setting, with relevant links, is a challenging task. Some concepts lend themselves more…
Descriptors: Scientific Concepts, STEM Education, Teaching Methods, Weather
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Liston, Maeve – Primary Science, 2015
Talk, peer collaboration and exchanging ideas significantly contribute to a child's conceptual understanding in science (Howe, McWilliam and Cross, 2005). Dialogue helps children to clarify their thinking and to develop their capacity to reason, which are crucial scientific process skills (Mercer et al., 2004). One very effective way of supporting…
Descriptors: Puppetry, Teaching Methods, Instructional Innovation, Science Instruction
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Mooney, Laura – Primary Science, 2013
During a recent theme on "Ourselves," Laura Mooney's class focused on height and looking at similarities and differences between a range of objects. This involved not only looking at each other, but also linked to their self-portrait development, where they had been learning about their facial features and comparing them to other…
Descriptors: Early Childhood Education, Science Activities, Science Process Skills, Observation
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Metcalfe, Gareth – Primary Science, 2014
How can educators provide children with a genuine experience of carrying out an extended scientific investigation? And can teachers change the perception of what it means to be a scientist? These were key questions that lay behind "The Human Condition" project, an initiative funded by the Primary Science Teaching Trust to explore a new…
Descriptors: Scientific Methodology, Scientific Research, Investigations, Learning Experience
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Turner, Jane – Primary Science, 2012
Is a "fair test" the only way to carry out science investigations? Many children (and primary teachers) following the National Curriculum in England and Wales would answer "yes" to this question. This is because fair test investigations have historically been promoted in national assessment, published curricula, schemes of work…
Descriptors: National Curriculum, Science Activities, Investigations, Testing
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