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Linfield, Rachel; Ireland, Erin – Primary Science, 2022
The "Primary SPACE Project Research Report: Sound" (Watt and Russell, 1990) provides interesting reading relating to primary-aged children's concepts of sound. It reveals a range of children's views on how sound is made, how sounds are heard and how sound travels. While some children are shown to have knowledge that sounds travel and are…
Descriptors: Physics, Acoustics, Teaching Methods, Science Instruction
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Waterhouse, Helen – Primary Science, 2019
It can be hugely beneficial for teachers to 'buy in' an expert for a day in an area that they are focusing on. Children are inspired by a special visitor and it can provide a new perspective to a topic and invigorate and extend learning. The variety of workshops and visitors available is astonishing. Students can be transported to outer space or…
Descriptors: Science Instruction, Workshops, Expertise, Teaching Methods
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Stylos, George; Kotsis, Konstantinos T. – Primary Science, 2021
Science is one of the most important subjects for students at all educational levels. To promote engagement, hands-on experiments can provide a 'realistic and exciting experience of the content' (Holstermann, Grube and Bögeholz, 2010: 744) and hopefully facilitate motivation. In this article, George Stylos and Konstantinos T. Kotsis present four…
Descriptors: Science Instruction, Teaching Methods, Heat, Scientific Concepts
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Bearchell, Sarah – Primary Science, 2018
Sarah Bearchell is a science specialist working with primary-aged pupils and their families, with a passion for making science accessible for everyone. In this article she outlines how allowing children ownership of their hands-on activities leads to more engaged learning.
Descriptors: Hands on Science, Active Learning, Science Activities, Lesson Plans
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Pierratos, Theodoros; Koumaras, Panagiotis – Primary Science, 2022
Although international school systems and resources can differ from those in the UK, it is always useful to have an informed worldview of practice in primary science. The COVID-19 pandemic has inevitably changed the ways in which pupils around the world have access to knowledge. Furthermore, it has changed the ways in which teachers globally…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Science Instruction, Teaching Methods, Physics
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Robinson, Louise – Primary Science, 2019
In this article, the author, Science Coordinator at St. Julian's Primary School in Wales, talks about giving children the bigger picture around science and STEM and making it relevant. She says the key is to find a subject or theme that your children are interested in and then sit down and identify all the cross-curricular links. This…
Descriptors: STEM Education, Relevance (Education), Learner Engagement, Student Interests
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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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Bianchi, Lynne – Primary Science, 2017
Tinker Tailor Robot Pi (TTRP) is an innovative curriculum development project, which started in September 2014. It involves in-service primary and secondary teachers, university academic engineers, business partners and pupils at Key Stages 1, 2 and 3 (ages 5-14). The focus of the work has been to explore how a pedagogy for primary engineering…
Descriptors: Curriculum Development, Elementary School Teachers, Secondary School Teachers, Partnerships in Education
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Nagel, Bert – Primary Science, 2015
Marble tracks are a very popular toy and big ones can be found in science centres in many countries. If children want to make a marble track themselves it is quite a job. It takes a long time, they can take up a lot of space and most structures are quite fragile, as the materials used can very quickly prove unfit for the task and do not last very…
Descriptors: STEM Education, Manipulative Materials, Toys, Teaching Methods
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Russell, Terry; McGuigan, Linda – Primary Science, 2015
The short view of inheritance is that it is about what every organism gets from its parents, one generation to the next. Young children appreciate that offspring have strong similarities with their parents. A longer perspective embraces the similarities and diversity in relatives' features; it includes the characteristics of predecessors within…
Descriptors: Science Instruction, Genetics, Evolution, Scientific Concepts
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Pathmanathan, Sai – Primary Science, 2015
Sai Pathmanathan writes in this article that, over the years, her experience working with early-years children (ages 3-5) has taught her that learning it is not about whether the children get the answer right, but more about nurturing their curiosity, encouraging play and learning through hands-on activities, promoting motor skills, group work,…
Descriptors: Science Instruction, Experiential Learning, Hands on Science, Preschool Children
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Chapman, Steven – Primary Science, 2014
Electricity can be a fun topic in a primary school class. It includes many practical experiments and links to real life contexts. However, teachers can feel daunted by the subject as they think they do not know enough about the science behind it to answer off-topic questions. The reason for the difficulty is that much of the science takes place…
Descriptors: Science Instruction, Elementary School Science, Energy, Scientific Concepts
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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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Davies, Tony – Primary Science, 2014
Teaching children about circuits and the way electricity works is a "tricky business" because it is invisible. Just imagine all eyes are on the teacher as he or she produces for the class what looks like a ping-pong ball and then, with a wave of their hand, the incredible happens! This wonderful white sphere begins to glow red and a…
Descriptors: Science Instruction, Elementary School Science, Electronics, Scientific Concepts
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