Barclayfox's Shop. Ready to use KS3 & KS4 lessons.
Average Rating4.41
(based on 76 reviews)
No preparation required! Physics, Chemistry, Biology also Maths
Complete and ready to use high quality science lessons that automatically navigate you and your class expertly through the lesson and activities.
All answers are built in.
For up to 60% off these resources visit www.foxteach.com.
FREE resource, leave a positive review and email us your tes user name and the resource you'd like (to the same value).
Contact Barclayfox at: foxteach@hotmail.com
No preparation required! Physics, Chemistry, Biology also Maths
Complete and ready to use high quality science lessons that automatically navigate you and your class expertly through the lesson and activities.
All answers are built in.
For up to 60% off these resources visit www.foxteach.com.
FREE resource, leave a positive review and email us your tes user name and the resource you'd like (to the same value).
Contact Barclayfox at: foxteach@hotmail.com
Updated and improved on 29th November 2016 and then again on 22nd August 2017.
A complete, and ready to deliver, high quality KS4 / GCSE lesson from Barclayfox.
This is a complete lesson from start to end, you do not need to spend many hours carefully planning, creating, resourcing and improving this lesson after each use. I have already spent those hours preparing this lesson for my students and improving it over many years.
There is nothing for you to do but give it a quick look through and familiarise yourself with it.
Lesson objectives:
* Explain how “ions” are formed.
* Understand the properties of alpha, beta and gamma radiation.
* Compare alpha, beta and gamma in terms of their abilities to penetrate and ionise.
The lesson contains:
Notes to help the teacher.
Starter task - unscramble the words race.
Recall Quiz questions with answers.
Card Sort activity - with answers.
Definitions (scientific literacy) activity.
Questions throughout – all answers are provided.
Theory slides (minimal and interactive – not ‘death by powerpoint’).
Gap fills.
Group work - excellent Kinaesthetic activity with questioning – to cement learning and provide some fun.
Video clip link (carefully selected – this alone can save you a lot of time).
Gap fill activity (table of properties) – all answers are provided
Plenary activity / quiz
Student self-assessment versus objectives activity – so learners can judge for themselves how much they have learnt.
Homework.
Equipment list - to give to your technicians.
As teachers we all work ridiculously long hours each week. Give yourself a break, spend some life with your wife / husband / children / friends / family by purchasing more lessons created by ‘Barclayfox’ once they appear on TES. Please note: when searching for resources please type barclayfox into the search box/engine and it will show you all my resources.
I hope you will purchase this excellent lesson and please leave positive feedback.
This lesson is part of a series, whilst they all work very well as standalone individual lessons you may wish to buy others from the series:
0. Bundle – contains all lessons (if available not all series are bundled)
1. Atoms, radiation and the discovery of the nucleus.
2. Isotopes and Mass number and Atomic number.
3. Alpha, Beta and Gamma – ionising radiation. This Lesson.
4. Changes in the nucleus – decay equations
5. Activity and half life
6. Activity and half life practicals
7. Dangers and precautions
8. Nuclear radiation in medicine (uses in medicine)
9. Nuclear fission and chain reactions (nuclear power).
10-14 See list in this powerpoint
Thank you for your time and happy teaching !
Yours,
Barclayfox.
A complete, and ready to deliver KS4 lesson
There is nothing for you to do but give it a quick look through and familiarise yourself with it.
Objectives / students learn to:
* Describe what is happening during the fission of uranium-235.
* Describe U-235’s fission products.
* Explain how a chain reaction works.
* Understand how a chain reaction can be controlled.
* Understand the different roles of control rods and moderators
* Understand the difference between fission and fusion.
This lesson majors on fission and chain reactions and their control (and briefly mentions fusion) and it contains the following activities:
Starter - picture puzzle to get the students thinking.
Starter (more) - game / quiz.
SPaG / literacy based on fission.
Video links (very carefully chosen and 3 in total).
Differentiated work sheets - 3 different levels of difficulty.
Gap fills.
Animations (2 different animations):
A single Fission reaction.
Fission chain reactions.
Kinaesthetic activity - get your students up and moving about.
Gap fill (on a different area of this subject).
Plenary quiz game.
All answers to all activities are provided.
Please note: when searching for resources please type barclayfox into the search box/engine and it will show you all my resources.
This lesson is part of a series, whilst they all work very well as standalone individual lessons you may wish to buy others from the series:
0. Bundle – contains all lessons (if available not all series are bundled)
1. History of the atom, discovery of the nucleus, Thompson and Rutherford.
2. Isotopes and Mass number and Atomic number.
3. Alpha, Beta and Gamma – ionising radiation.
4. Changes in the nucleus – decay equations
5. Half life, radioactivity and decay.
6. Activity and half life practicals
7. Dangers and precautions
8. Nuclear radiation in medicine (uses in medicine)
9 -14 Please see this powerpoint for the full list.
Thank you, and happy teaching!
Yours,
Barclayfox.
A complete, and ready to deliver, KS4 lesson.
(For USA - this lesson is at 8th to 10th grade level).
There is nothing for you to do but give it a quick look through and familiarise yourself with it.
Lesson outomes:
* I can name forces and identify the direction they act in (KS3 revision).
* I understand Newton’s 3rd law.
* I can analyse situations using N3L
This carefully crafted lesson is over 30 slides long, and is full of learning activities as below:
* Notes to help the teacher.
* Starter - simple task where students self-assess against the objectives.
* Activity sheet - unique to Barclayfox.
* Activity sheet answers.
* Questions – all answers are provided.
* Self marking / Peer marking
* Theory slides (carefully sculpted, interspaced with learning activities, not ‘death by powerpoint’).
* Play ball.
* Quiz Quiz Trade game.
* Video clip link (carefully selected – this alone can save you 20+ minutes of searching).
* Paired work activities – all answers are provided.
* Student self-assessment versus objectives activity – so learners can judge for themselves how much they have learnt.
Please purchase this lesson, and leave a positive review.
This lesson is part of a series, whilst they all work very well as standalone individual lessons you may wish to buy others from the series:
0. Bundles – contain 3 or more of these lessons at a discounted price (however please note not all my series are bundled).
1. Vectors and scalars.
2. Forces between objects (contact / non-contact and Newton’s 3rd law).
3. Forces and Newton’s third law (N3L).
4. Resultant forces, free body diagrams.
5. Forces and acceleration F=Ma
6. Required practical F=Ma
7 to 12 - please see list in this powerpoint
Thank you, and happy teaching!
Yours,
Barclayfox.
Observing the stars and space exploration, light years, telescopes, probes, landers. Complete KS3 lesson. ‘Observing and exploring’ is number 5 in a series of 6 high quality lessons that fully and expertly delivers all the points within BOTH the NEW KS3 Department for Education ‘Space Physics’ National Curriculum and the AQA KS3 specification / syllabus sections ‘3.7.2 Universe’ and ‘3.1.2 Gravity’.
COMPLETE AND READY TO USE:
All resources are included in this excellent powerpoint lesson, there is nothing for you to do but deliver it. Zero preparation time, project and go !
‘OBSERVING AND EXPLORING’ - STUDENT OUTCOMES:
By the end of the lesson students will be able to:
* Understand what a ‘light year’ is.
* Explain how large the universe is compared to the earth.
* Apply understanding of the ‘speed of light’
* Describe ways of discovering the universe from the earth.
* Explain how probes can be used to explore the universe.
STARTER
Pupils will start the lessons by thinking and working in pairs in a race to solve a picture puzzle and work out what today’s lesson is about. After discussion that leads to revealing the title and lesson outcomes, students then self assess against their current understanding of this lesson.
MAIN and MAIN and MAIN…
This lesson is chunked into discrete sections to support learning and engender positive behaviour by keeping students interested and focused. All points of the specification are addressed.
There are various student activities such as: gap fills, matching, paired work, literacy activities, focused questions with answers and differentiation (“challenge missons”), picture puzzle, homework, carefully selected video, self-assessment opportunities, peer assessment opportunities etc. This good variety of activities keeps pupils focused and happily learning.
PLENARY:
In the plenary activity pupils complete a matching activity and then peer assess it to uncover how much they have learnt during the lesson. They then self-assess themselves against the lesson outcomes. Students who need further support set themselves additional homework to enhance learning of today’s lesson.
EXTENSION ACTIVITIES:
These are provided just in case any group requires them.
THANK YOU FOR LOOKING:
Thank you for taking the time to look, your positive feedback would be very much appreciated :)
THIS IS ONE OF A SERIES OF 6 LESSONS:
1. Solar system, stars and galaxies and the universe.
2. Geocentric and heliocentric solar system models
3. Seasons.
4. Gravity, weight and mass.
5. Exploring and observing the universe.
6. The moon’s phases.
MORE HIGH QUALITY LESSONS:
For more lessons that meet the new KS3 and KS4 specifications please type Barclayfox into the tes resources search engine to see all my lessons.
Happy teaching !
Barclayfox.
Isotopes - a complete KS4 / GCSE lesson
Lesson objectives:
* Understand atomic structure.
* Know what isotopes, mass number, and atomic number are.
* Describe nuclei of different atoms using mass number and atomic number in the form: X superscript m subscript p.
* Use atomic number and mass number to calculate the number of protons, electrons and neutrons in an atom.
* Draw the structures of specific atoms.
The lesson contains:
* Notes to help the teacher.
* Help sheet (can be given to all students, or to only those who the plenary shows found the lesson difficult, or to students who missed the lesson).
* Homework sheet with answers (you choose whether your learners need to do it).
* Starter - picture puzzle.
* Simple task where students self-assess themselves against each objective
* Big question to get students thinking.
* Scientific literacy.
* Revision game - played in small teams - all answers are provided.
* Questions – all answers are provided.
* Gap fill activities - various, with answers.
* Theory slides (carefully sculpted and interactive to avoid ‘death by powerpoint’)
* Video clip link (carefully selected – saves you time searching the internet).
* Plenary assessment quiz.
* Student self-assessment versus objectives activity.
Waste no more of your precious time searching, buy now!
This lesson is part of a series, whilst they all work very well as standalone individual lessons you may wish to buy others from the series:
0. Bundle – contains all lessons (if available not all series are bundled)
1. History of the atom and the discovery of the nucleus.
2. Isotopes and Mass number and Atomic number.
3. Alpha, Beta and Gamma – ionising radiation.
4. Changes in the nucleus – decay equations
5. Activity and half life
6 to 14 Please see this power point for the rest of the list.
Thank you, and happy teaching!
Yours,
Barclayfox.
Seasons, why they happen, northern hemisphere, sun’s height in the sky, day and night etc. Complete lesson. Seasons is number 3 in a series of 6 high quality lessons that fully and expertly delivers all the points within BOTH the NEW KS3 Department for Education ‘Space Physics’ National Curriculum and the AQA KS3 specification / syllabus sections ‘3.7.2 Universe’ and ‘3.1.2 Gravity’.
NO PREPARATION REUIRED ! Simply submit the equipment list to your technicians and then the PPT will lead you step by step through the entire lesson.
Recall why we have day and night.
* Explain the seasons and the importance of the sun’s angle.
* Explain why if it is summer in the UK, it is winter in Australia.
* Compare the shadows and the suns positions in winter and summer.
* Use new literacy words such as sphere, hemisphere, equator etc
* Successfully complete a simple practical to explain summer and winter.
STARTER
Pupils will start the lessons by thinking and working in pairs in a race to solve a picture puzzle and work out what today’s lesson is about. After discussion that leads to revealing the title and lesson outcomes, students then self assess against their current understanding of this lesson.
MAIN and MAIN and MAIN…
This lesson is chunked into discrete sections to support learning and engender positive behaviour by keeping students interested and focused. All points of the specification are addressed.
There are various student activities such as: demo, practical, gap fills, matching, paired work, literacy activities, focused questions with answers and differentiation, picture puzzle, mini test, homework, carefully selected video, self-assessment opportunities, peer assessment opportunities etc. This good variety of activities keeps pupils focused and happily learning.
PLENARY:
In the plenary activity pupils complete a matching activity and then peer assess it to uncover how much they have learnt during the lesson. They then self-assess themselves against the lesson outcomes. Students who need further support set themselves additional homework to enhance learning of today’s lesson.
EXTENSION ACTIVITIES:
These are provided just in case any group requires them.
All resources are included in this excellent lesson, there is nothing for you to do but deliver it.
Thank you for looking, your positive feedback would be very much appreciated :)
This lesson is one of a series of 6:
1. Solar system, stars and galaxies and the universe.
2. Geocentric and heliocentric solar system models
3. Seasons.
4. Gravity, weight and mass.
5. Exploring and observing the universe.
6. The moon’s phases.
For more lessons that meet the new KS3 and KS4 specifications please type Barclayfox into the tes resources search engine to see all my lessons.
Happy teaching !
Barclayfox.
Moon’s phases, phases of the moon, waxing, waning, gibbous, crescent.
Complete KS3 lesson. ‘The Moon’s phases’
‘‘THE MOON’S PHASES’’ - STUDENT OUTCOMES:
By the end of the lesson students will be able to:
* Use new literacy words e.g. waxing and waning.
* Draw the different phases of the Moon.
* Name the phases of the moon.
* Explain why we see phases of the Moon.
* Successfully complete a phases of the moon practical.
STARTER
Pupils will start the lessons by thinking and working in pairs in a race to solve a picture puzzle and work out what today’s lesson is about. After discussion that leads to revealing the title and lesson outcomes, students then self assess against their current understanding of this lesson.
MAIN and MAIN and MAIN…
This lesson is chunked into discrete sections to support learning and engender positive behaviour by keeping students interested and focused. All points of the specification are addressed.
There are various student activities such as: practical, unique activity sheet, animation, carefully selected video, paired work, literacy activities, focused questions with answers and differentiation, picture puzzle, quiz, homework, gap fill, self-assessment and peer assessment opportunities etc. This good variety of activities keeps pupils focused and happily learning.
PLENARY:
In the plenary activity pupils complete a quiz and then peer assess it to uncover how much they have learnt during the lesson. They then self-assess themselves against the lesson outcomes. Students who need further support set themselves additional homework to enhance learning of today’s lesson.
EXTENSION ACTIVITIES:
These are provided just in case any group requires them.
COMPLETE AND READY TO USE:
All resources are included in this excellent lesson, there is nothing for you but order the equipment (list is provided), photocopy the unique activity sheet and deliver the lesson.
THANK YOU FOR LOOKING:
Thanks for looking, your positive feedback would be very much appreciated :)
THIS IS ONE OF A SERIES OF 6 LESSONS:
1. Solar system, stars and galaxies and the universe.
2. Geocentric and heliocentric solar system models
3. Seasons.
4. Gravity, weight and mass.
5. Exploring and observing the universe.
6. The moon’s phases.
MORE HIGH QUALITY LESSONS:
For more lessons that meet the new KS3 and KS4 specifications please type Barclayfox into the tes resources search engine to see all my lessons.
Happy teaching !
Barclayfox.
Energy stores and pathways (new GCSE 9-1). High quality, differentiated and complete lesson.
Outcomes as below.
Differentiated.
Complete and ready to deliver.
Easy to use
Optimised - low teacher effort for great student results.
Simple and clear.
Engaging and varied.
Unique.
Correct to the new 9-1 GCSE spec (Beware! Many lessons on tes are not correct as they are the old specification and this includes some that claim to be 9-1).
OUTCOMES
I can:
ALL: Understand and recall the 8 energy stores and 4 pathways.
ALL: Understand that energy is not created or destroyed, only transferred.
MOST: During a practical apply stores and pathways to describe energy transfers.
SOME: Create energy transfer diagrams.
Please do NOT buy this if you bought my other complete lesson on energy stores and transfers.
Your feedback would be appreciated :)
Happy teaching!
Barclayfox.
There are lots more great time saving lessons in my tes shop:
Barclayfox’s shop
Search words:
New specification, new spec., new science spec, new science specification, new physics spec, 9-1, 9 – 1, GCSE, AQA, Edexcel, OCR, WJEC, IOP, energy, energy stores, energy types, energy transfers, energy pathways, energy carriers, not energy resources, joules, Joules, conservation of energy.
A complete, KS4 lesson
For USA - this lesson is for use between 8th to 10th grade.
There is nothing for you to do but give it a quick look through and familiarise yourself with it.
Lesson objectives:
* Understand the difference between mass and weight.
* Understand the role that gravity plays in this difference.
* Be able to successfully calculate weight and mass.
This carefully crafted lesson is over 30 slides long, and is full of learning activities as below:
* Starter - simple task where students self-assess against the objectives.
* Quiz with answers.
* Questions – all answers are provided.
* Differentiated questions – all answers are provided.
* Peer marking
* Self marking
* Theory slides (carefully sculpted, interspaced with learning activities,
* Play ball.
* Video clip link (carefully selected – this alone can save you 20+ minutes of searching).
* Paired work activities – all answers are provided.
* Scientific Literacy activity.
* Scientific Numeracy activity
* Plenary formative/summative assessment quiz / activity.
* Student self-assessment versus objectives activity – so learners can judge for themselves how much they have learnt.
* Extension activities – just in case additional activities are required.
Please purchase this lesson, and leave a positive review.
This lesson is part of a series, whilst they all work very well as standalone individual lessons you may wish to buy others from the series:
0. Bundles – contain 3 or more of these lessons at a discounted price (however please note not all my series are bundled).
1. Vectors and scalars.
2. Forces between objects (contact / non-contact and Newton’s 3rd law).
3. Forces and Newton’s third law (N3L).
4. Resultant forces, free body diagrams.
5. Forces and acceleration F=Ma
6. Required practical F=Ma
7 to 12 - please see list in this powerpoint
Thank you, and happy teaching!
Yours,
Barclayfox.
KS3 Sound and hearing ready to deliver.
This lesson covers:
Sound and hearing, vibrations, loudness, amplitude, frequency, pitch
LisA FisP, sound vs light, speed in a solid and gas, and hearing range.
There is nothing to do but give it a quick look through it. you make a change its modular nature makes it very quick and easy to tune it to your exact requirements.
No marking for you ! All answers for all activities are included in the PPT to allow peer and/or self-assessment to reduce your workload !
Thank you for your time, and happy teaching!
Barclayfox.
Students will be able to:
Understand that vibrations create sounds.
Explain why there is no sound in a vacuum.
Explain why the speed of sound is different in a solid compared to a gas.
Compare the speed of sound and light in a thunderstorm.
Calculate how far away a thunderstorm is
Know and use the LisA FisP memory trick.
State the range of frequencies of human hearing and compare to some animals.
Activities this lesson contains:
Unscramble starter puzzle.
Demo or video (depending on your groups needs) with Q&A.
Literacy activity.
Numeracy activity / calculations.
Theory - carefully sculpted, lots of learning activities,
Quiz with answers.
Videos x2 (simply finding good videos can save you 20 minutes).
Questions scattered throughout - all answers are provided.
Paired work activities / TPS.
Simple student self-assessment activity (learners judge their own progress vs LOs).
Extension activities (if required)
All answers are provided to make things easy for you.
.
.
.
.
Key words:
Waves, wave, waves wsave, wavse, wvaes, hearing, energy, vibrations, oscillations, frequency, pitch, loudness, frequency, types of waves, light, sound, thunder, sound and hearing, lightning, lightening, literacy, scientific literacy, waves, energy, KS3, hearing range, human hearing, dog, cat, sound in a vacuum, vacuum, vaccum, lisa fisp, LisA FisP
A complete / full / ready to go AS/A level Physics lesson.
It contains:
Notes to help the teacher.
Title and lesson objectives (see below).
SI fundamental units activity.
Questions with answers.
Many numerical Questions with FULLY WORKED OUT answers.
Definitions…
Theory slides
Homework (simple research)
Video link (very cool)
Assessment activity / plenary quiz
Student self assessment versus objectives activity.
Lesson objectives:
* Explain what electric current is.
* Define current, Amp and the Coulomb.
* Understand and use the equation for charge.
It also covers 7 Fundamental SI units.
Please buy this lesson and leave positive feedback.
Thank you for your time
Barclayfox.
A complete, 3 tier differentiated KS4 lesson
This is a complete lesson from start to end, with Differentiated resources and a Practical,
There is nothing for you to do but give it a quick look through and familiarise yourself with it.
Lesson objectives:
* I understand what momentum is a measure of.
* I can explain that momentum is a vector.
* I am able to calculate momentum in lots of scenarios.
* I can rearrange and use the momentum equation.
In short this lesson contains: theory, differentiated worksheet with all answers, and a practical activity - for full details please see below.
* Notes to help the teacher.
* Starter - choice of two.
* Short Starter - simple task where students self-assess against the objectives.
* Activity sheet - Differentiated with ANSWERS.
* Quiz with answers.
* Questions – all answers are provided, students get lots of practice.
* Up and about activity
* Theory slides (carefully sculpted, interspaced with learning activities, not ‘death by powerpoint’).
* Differentiated questions with answers.
* Paired work activities T/P/S – answers are provided.
* Homework
* Scientific literacy activity.
* Optional Practical Activity.
* Plenary formative/summative assessment quiz / activity.
* Student self-assessment versus objectives activity – so learners can judge for themselves how much they have learnt.
Please note: when searching for resources please type barclayfox into the search box/engine and it will show you all our resources.
This lesson is part of a series, whilst they all work very well as standalone individual lessons you may wish to buy others from the series:
0. Bundle – contains all lessons (if available not all my series are bundled)
1. Momentum.
2. Conservation of momentum, collisions, elastic and inelastic events.
3. Momentum, impulse, crumple zones and safety.
Thank you, and happy teaching!
Yours,
Barclayfox.
Search words:
Momentum, momentum, momentum, miss spellings: mementum, momenyum, monentum, mimentum, mmomentum, momentum, what is momentum, mass, velocity, inertia, physics, p = m x v, p=mv, p=mxv, kgm/s, kg m/s, momentum, momentum, vector quantity, vector, mom, p=, units, AQA, edexcel, WJEC, OCR, Momentum, GCSE, N5, 10th grade 10 grade, grade 10, grade 9, 9th grade, 9 grade, 8th grade, 8 grade, grade 8.
A complete, and ready to deliver, KS4 lesson
For USA - this lesson is for use between 8th and 10th grade.
There is nothing for you to do but give it a quick look through and familiarise yourself with it.
Lesson outcomes, students will be able to:
* Draw “free body diagrams”.
* Explain Newton’s first law.
* Explain Newton’s third law.
* Successfully calculate “resultant” forces.
This carefully crafted lesson is over 40 slides long, and is full of learning activities as below:
* Notes to help the teacher.
* Starter - simple task where students self-assess against the objectives.
* Activity sheet (unique) - simply print this slide for each student.
* Activity sheet - answers.
* Gap fill activity - all answers are provided.
* Quiz with answers - using mini whiteboards (if available)
* Questions – all answers are provided.
* Peer or self marking
* Theory slides (carefully sculpted, interspaced with learning activities, not ‘death by powerpoint’).
* Play ball.
* Paired work activities – all answers are provided.
* Homework
* Scientific Literacy activity.
* Scientific Numeracy activity
* Student self-assessment versus objectives activity – so learners can judge for themselves how much they have learnt.
Please purchase this lesson, and leave a positive review.
This lesson is part of a series, whilst they all work very well as standalone individual lessons you may wish to buy others from the series:
0. Bundles – contain 3 or more of these lessons at a discounted price (however please note not all my series are bundled).
1. Vectors and scalars.
2. Forces between objects (contact / non-contact and Newton’s 3rd law).
3. Forces and Newton’s third law (N3L).
4. Resultant forces, free body diagrams - This Lesson.
5. Forces and acceleration F=Ma
6. Required practical F=Ma
7 to 12 - please see list in this powerpoint
Thank you, and happy teaching!
Yours,
Barclayfox.
A complete, and ready to deliver, high quality KS4 / GCSE lesson.
(USA grades 9, 10 and 11)
There is nothing for you to do but give it a quick look through and familiarise yourself with it.
Lesson objectives:
* Know the forces that oppose the driving force of a vehicle.
* Define thinking distance, braking distance and stopping distance.
* Describe factors affecting thinking distance and braking distance.
* Understand why doubling speed doubles thinking distance but more than doubles braking distance.
* Use the braking distance equation successfully.
This carefully crafted lesson is over 40 slides long, and is full of learning activities as below:
* Notes to help the teacher.
* Starter - recall quiz.
* Starter - simple task where students self-assess against the objectives.
* Practical experiment.
* Peer marking
* Self marking
* Theory slides (carefully sculpted, interspaced with learning activities, not ‘death by powerpoint’).
* Questions – all answers are provided.
* Differentiated questions - all answers are provided.
* Play ball.
* Video clip link (carefully selected – this alone can save you 20+ minutes of searching).
* Paired work activities – all answers are provided.
* Scientific Literacy activity.
* Scientific Numeracy activity
* SMSC
* Plenary formative/summative assessment questions.
* Student self-assessment versus objectives activity – so learners can judge for themselves how much they have learnt.
As teachers we all work ridiculously long hours each week. Give yourself a break, spend some life with your wife / husband / children / friends / family by purchasing more lessons created by “Barclayfox” once they appear on TES. Please note: when searching for resources please type barclayfox into the search box/engine and it will show you all our resources.
Please purchase this lesson, and leave a positive review.
Thank you, and happy teaching!
Yours,
Barclayfox.
The ear - KS3 science lesson that teachers pupils about the parts of the ear.
Their functions, loudness, decibels, dB, ear damage, making and seeing sounds, oscilloscope, and noise cancellation.
It includes an attractive PowerPoint with many varied activities to keep students focused.
The PPT includes an unscramble puzzle race, video links, sequencing activity, gap fill, ear based literacy and numeracy, homework, and a plenary quiz.
No marking for you ! All answers are provided throughout for easy peer or self-assessment.
Duration: 1 lesson
Like you I always want to give my young people the best lessons I can so I have spent a lot of time and effort on this spread out over 10+ years, I hope you like it! Feedback welcome :-D
Thank you for your time, and happy teaching!
Barclayfox.
Christmas science quiz - Biology, Chemistry and Physics.
Ready to use - no prep required.
5 rounds:
Chemistry - game.
Pop music - activity.
Christmas Physics.
Christmas Biology.
World Tour.
Flexible duration - use the rounds you prefer.
Full Powerpoint is over 100 slides .
Suitable for year 7 to year 11 inclusive.
Best wishes,
Barclayfox
KS4 F=Ma, Newton’s 2nd Law.
There is nothing for you to do but give it a quick look through and familiarise yourself with it.
Lesson objectives:
* I can draw “free body diagrams”
* I can calculate the resultant force on an object.
* I can rearrange and use F = M a
* I can explain why an object travelling around a corner at constant speed is accelerating.
* Understand what inertia is
This carefully crafted lesson is over 40 slides long, and is full of learning activities as below:
* Notes to help the teacher.
* Starter - unscramble the words.
* Starter - simple task where students self-assess against the objectives.
* Activity sheet - differentiated and unique, all answers are provided.
* Gap fill activity - all answers are provided.
* Questions – all answers are provided.
* Differentiated questions – all answers are provided.
* Peer marking
* Theory slides (carefully sculpted, interspaced with learning activities, not ‘death by powerpoint’).
* Play ball.
* Video clip link (carefully selected – this alone can save you 20+ minutes of searching).
* Paired work activities – all answers are provided.
* Scientific Literacy activity.
* Scientific Numeracy via the many questions.
* Student self-assessment versus objectives activity – so learners can judge for themselves how much they have learnt.
As teachers we all work ridiculously long hours each week. Give yourself a break, spend some life with your wife / husband / children / friends / family by purchasing more lessons created by “Barclayfox” once they appear on TES. Please note: when searching for resources please type barclayfox into the search box/engine and it will show you all our resources.
Please purchase this lesson, and leave a positive review.
This lesson is part of a series, whilst they all work very well as standalone individual lessons you may wish to buy others from the series:
0. Bundles – contain some or even all lessons (if available, not all my series are bundled)
1. Vectors and scalars.
2. Forces between objects (contact / non-contact and Newton’s 3rd law).
3. Resultant forces – part 1
4. Resultant forces – part 2
5 to 12 - please see list in this powerpoint
Thank you, and happy teaching!
Yours,
Barclayfox.
Space, solar system, stars, galaxies, moons, light years, gravity, the universe. Complete KS3 lesson. This is lesson 1 in a series of 6 high quality lessons that fully and expertly delivers all the points within BOTH the NEW KS3 Department for Education ‘Space Physics’ National Curriculum and the AQA KS3 specification / syllabus sections ‘3.7.2 Universe’ and ‘3.1.2 Gravity’. Updated and Improved 17th June 2019.
Ready to use, no preparation required ! Project and go !! The powerpoint will lead you through every step.
STUDENT LEARNING OUTCOMES - are given towards the bottom of this text.
STARTER
Pupils will start the lessons by thinking and working in pairs in a race to unscramble some of the key words in today’s lesson. After revealing the title and lesson outcomes students self assess against their current understanding of this topic.
MAIN and MAIN and MAIN…
This lesson is ‘chunked’ into discrete sections to support learning and engender positive behaviour by keeping students interested and focused. All points of the specification are addressed. There are various student activities such as gap fill, matching, reviewing a solar system model, words unscramble, literacy activity, questions and answers, think/pair/share, quiz, sort into size order, mnemonic, self-assessment, peer assessment etc.
PLENARY
In the plenary activity pupils complete a quiz and then peer assess it to uncover how much they have learnt during the lesson. They then self assess themselves against the lesson outcomes. Students who need further support set themselves additional homework to enhance learning of today’s lesson.
EXTENSION ACTIVITIES
These are provided just in case any group requires them.
All resources are included in this excellent lesson, there is nothing for you to do but deliver it.
OUTCOMES - STUDENTS LEARN TO:
* Understand the structure of the solar system and be able to draw it with the planets in the correct order. * Explain what keeps the planets in place ‘orbiting’ the sun.
* Understand what ‘stars’ and ‘galaxies’ and ‘light years’ are…
* Use new literacy words such as ‘orbit’ and ‘light year’.
* Comprehend the vast size of the Milky Way and the Universe.
Thank you for looking, your positive feedback would be very much appreciated :)
Lesson 1 in a series of 6:
1. Solar system, stars and galaxies and the universe.
2. Geocentric and heliocentric solar system models
3. Seasons.
4. Gravity, weight and mass.
5. Exploring and observing the universe.
6. The moon’s phases.
For more lessons designed to meet the new KS3 and KS4 specifications please type Barclayfox into the tes resources search engine to see all my lessons.
Happy teaching !
Barclayfox.
On sale at this price for only 1 week, hurry!*
Great fun quiz / lesson, complete and ready to use - WITHOUT MENTIONING CHRISTMAS ! Can be used at end of any term or end of year - it is a fantastic fun quiz. Excellent enjoyable lesson were students still learn - so that keeps both SLT and the students happy !!
There is nothing for you to do, no need to spend hours carefully planning and resourcing this happy lesson as I’ve spent 12+ hours creating and then updating this for you and my students.
Your students will love the following activities:
Round 1: Observation - watch a Disney Pixar film trailer and see how much they observed.
Round 2: Music - have fun identifying artists and albums and songs.
Round 3: Bingo - a great game covering Maths, English, Science, Geography, and History, very enjoyable.
Round 4: A to Z alphabet knowledge - covering Maths, English, Science, Geography, and History. 26 questions, use as many as you wish.
*** NOTE - THIS IS A DECEMBER FUN RESOURCE THAT DOES NOT TALK ABOUT CHRISTMAS ***
All answers are provided and students can peer or self mark. There are over 70 pages/slides - more than enough to keep your students happy for at least 1 full fun lesson!
Happy teaching!
Barclayfox.
Energy stores and transfers (new GCSE 9-1). Get a FREE lesson! Details below. This is a high quality, differentiated, easy to use and ready to use lesson. The outcomes are noted below.
ENERGY - THE LANGUAGE HAS CHANGED:
Tes is littered with energy lessons and resources teaching to the old spec. which are no longer applicable if taught today – which is a polite way of saying they are wrong. There are even some resources I’ve looked at that claim to be new spec. 9-1 – but they are wrong too, even BBC Bitesize is getting some aspects confused. Please don’t risk teaching your classes incorrectly ! This resource teaches the subject properly and clearly with differentiated and unique activity sheets you cannot get anywhere else. One is a differentiated crossword and the other a differentiated energy circus practical - 2 highly engaging activities for your young people.
WHY BUY THIS ?
A whole weekend of effort last year + a further 3 hours of enhancing this year when I taught it again. Tried and trusted, differentiated and complete. You can rely on this lesson to give an accurate and superior learning experience.
AGES
For ages 13 to 16 where ever you live (KS4/GCSE + USA grades 8 to 10).
GET A FREE LESSON !
Purchase this resource, leave a fair review and choose another Barclayfox resource (to the same value as this one) for free! Just email your tes username and your chosen resource to foxteach@hotmail.com It’s as simple as that !
OUTCOMES
Your young people will be able to:
ALL: Understand and recall the 8 energy stores and 4 pathways.
ALL: Understand that energy is not created or destroyed, only transferred.
MOST: Apply stores and pathways to describe energy transfers.
SOME: Create energy transfer diagrams.
Happy teaching!
Barclayfox.
OTHER BARCLAYFOX RESOURCES:
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There are lots more great time saving lessons in my shop:
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Or, perhaps have a glance at some of my other high quality lessons...
The atom, discovery of the nucleus, Thompson, Rutherford, alpha scattering, Bohr - KS4 Physics
Scalars and Vectors - KS4 Physics
Vaccinations, immunity and Edward Jenner - KS3 Biology.
AQA, Edexcel, OCR, WJEC.