KS1/2 P4C-IshQuick View
UCL-Physics-Group-Project

KS1/2 P4C-Ish

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<p>Pack of 2 lessons on ‘Ish’ by Peter Reynolds. Including fun activities and link to the video book. Suitable for KS1/Lower KS2.</p>
Energy Resources: Physics Group ProjectQuick View
UCL-Physics-Group-Project

Energy Resources: Physics Group Project

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<p>Students will be put into groups of 3-4. Each student group will be assigned an energy resource. There are 8 energy resources, which are:</p> <p>Wind Power / Turbines<br /> Solar Power / Panels<br /> Fossil Fuels<br /> Nuclear Power<br /> Biofuels<br /> Hydroelectricity<br /> Tidal Power<br /> Water Waves<br /> Geothermal energy<br /> List out these energy resources to the students, then assign one to each group. Explain to students that a brief reminder of how each energy resource works will be given later in the presentation.</p> <p>After this, students will be introduced to three scenarios / geographical locations .<br /> ‘The countryside’<br /> ‘The coast’<br /> ‘The city’</p> <p>Teachers can flip back and forth between slide 2 and slide 3,4,5 to explain each geographical location.</p> <p>The task at hand is to have the groups select a geographical location that their energy resource would suit best. After selecting an appropriate location within their groups, students will have to present their arguments as to why their energy resource suits their chosen geographical location best, how the resource works, its advantages and its disadvantages to the class. How the students present this is up to them, they can choose from a list of different presentation formats.</p>
Motion & Energy Video GameQuick View
UCL-Physics-Group-Project

Motion & Energy Video Game

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<p>Educational games were created as interactive personal computer (PC) games using PowerPoint. The games require a mouse, as the user interacts with the interface by clicking on the correct answer, and the visual feedback is displayed on a monitor.</p> <p>The first video game covers forces, motion and energy. The storyline involves Tom, the main character, going through problems on his journey home. Each situation will have to be resolved to advance through levels to get to the final destination. This game is an adventure type multiple-choice mouse game.</p> <p>The game is composed of five levels, with each level having one to three questions with a total of twelve questions.</p>
Space Physics & Electricity Video GameQuick View
UCL-Physics-Group-Project

Space Physics & Electricity Video Game

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<p>Educational games were created as interactive personal computer (PC) games using PowerPoint. The games require a mouse, as the user interacts with the interface by clicking on the correct answer, and the visual feedback is displayed on a monitor.</p> <p>The video game covers Space Physics &amp; Electricity. The game’s protagonist will be an astronaut, and there is a mission given to him to start a space trip to the Sun to conduct research. The game was generally divided into two stages. The first stage takes place before the spaceship launch, and the second stage takes place during launch as well as in space. There will be questions of Space Physics And Electricity in each stage. The player will need to answer all the questions correctly to advance to the next stage, and scoring systems were implemented to count the number of correct answers.</p>