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
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.
Gravity, weight and mass. Gravitational field strength on other planets. Complete KS3 lesson. Gravity is lesson 4 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 REQUIRED ! Simply print the worksheet (or you could project it) the PPT carefully leads you step by step through the lesson so no preparation required.
GRAVITY STUDENT OUTCOMES:
By the end of the lesson students will:
* Know what gravity is, and which direction it acts in.
* Understand the factors that affect gravitational field strength.
* Understand the difference between mass and weight.
* Be able to calculate weight and mass on the earth.
* Be able to calculate weight on other planets.
STARTER
Pupils will start the lessons by thinking and working in pairs in a race to unscramble key words 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: calculations with answers, gap fill, matching, paired work, literacy activities, focused questions with answers and differentiation, word unscramble, homework activity sheet (unique), mnemonic MATTHEW, 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 questions and then peer assess 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 to do but photocopy the activity homework 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.
Complete and ready to use high quality KS3 Biology lesson. All resources are included in this engaging and fun lesson. Students learn to:
* Understand new key words such as vaccine, smallpox, bacteria etc
* Describe the role of vaccines in fighting disease.
* Explain how vaccines work.
* Analyse the sequence describing how Edward Jenner developed the very first vaccine.
STARTER
Pupils will start the lessons by thinking and working in pairs in a race to work out a picture puzzle. This leads to revealing the title and lesson outcomes, and then students self assess against their current understanding of this topic (at the end of the lesson they will use this assessment to reflect on how much progress they made during the lesson).
MAIN and MAIN and MAIN…
This lesson is ‘chunked’ into discrete sections to support learning and create positive behaviour by keeping students interested and focused as they have fun learning. There are various interesting and fun student activities such as gap fill, matching, video, sequencing, literacy activity, questions with answers, recall, think/pair/share, quiz, self-assessment and peer assessment opportunities, up and about game etc.
PLENARY
In the plenary activity pupils complete a physical (up and about) quiz to uncover how much they have learnt during the lesson. Next they self assess their progress 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, your positive feedback would be very much appreciated :)
Other Barclayfox lessons in this series:
0. Bundle – contains all lessons (if available, not all series are bundled)
1. Vaccinations – lesson 1 (Immunity & Edward Jenner & Penicillin etc).
2. Vaccinations – lesson 2 (Advantages & disadvantages, how pathogens spread etc).
3. Antibiotics - lesson 1 (Medicines, Fleming, penicillin, selecting an appropriate antibiotic)
4. Antibiotics - lesson 2 (Antibiotic resistance, superbugs, MRSA, antibiotic resistant bacteria).
5. DNA & Darwin & evolution & Peer review (Discovery of the structure of DNA, evolution etc)
6. Preventing extinction (conservation, seed banks, gene banks, captive breeding etc)
7. Revision lesson. (Vaccines, antibiotics, DNA, evolution, extinction etc).
For more great lessons please type Barclayfox into the tes resources search engine to see all my lessons.
Happy teaching !
Barclayfox.
Search Words:
vaccine, vaccination, Edward Jenner, immunity, immune, virus, bacteria, smallpox, cowpox, antibodies, MMR, Mumps, Measles, Rubella, vaccination, German measles, HPV, human papilloma virus.
*** BEING UPDATED PLEASE DO NOT NOT NOT PURCHASE AT THE MOMENT. AS THERE ARE NO USEFUL FILES TO DOWNLOAD. THANK YOU ***
Get a free resource! Purchase this resource, leave a review and choose another Barclayfox resource (to the same value) for free! Simply email your tes username and the title of your chosen resource to foxteach@hotmail.com
This resource includes 2 worksheets plus 2 answer sheets. (1 x adaptations in animals with 1 x answer sheet, also 1 x adaptations in plants with 1 x answer sheet). Aimed at KS3 Biology (UK) / Grades 6 to 8 (USA) etc. It could also be used with low ability or SEND learners at 9 -
1 GCSE.
Complete and ready to use worksheets, excellent opportunity to move the leaning focus to your pupils and allow independent working and then self marking and/or peer marking activities.
Thank you for looking, these worksheets will save you a lot of time and effort. If you choose to buy, your positive feedback on tes would be very much appreciated :)
If you buy - don't forget to claim your FREE resource!
Happy teaching !
Barclayfox.
Search Words:
Worksheet, activity sheet, answers, with answers, adaptation, animals, plants, polar bear, camel, shark, fur, blubber, teeth, claws, gills, marram grass, stomata, cuticle, transpiration.
This lesson is 1 in a series of 5 that expertly and fully delivers all the points within the NEW KS3 specification SoW on the “light” topic.
I find that this powerpoint and the interesting activities keep lower level students engaged during the lesson while allowing differentiation for higher achievers. I’m sure you’ll find it useful. :-)
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.
STARTER
Pupils will start the lessons by thinking/working in pairs to solve a picture puzzle and discovering what the lesson is about. After revealing the title and lesson outcomes students self assess against their current understanding of this topic. Next there is a student lead laser light demonstration as they begin to identify the key properties of light.
MAIN
The slides then move on to lead the students in comparing light and sound. They will delve a little deeper into this by watching a video, discussing it and answering key questions.
MAIN
Next, the lesson focuses on numeracy questions based around the speed equation and the speed of light. Once this has been completed they can self assess their work using the answers provided.
MAIN
Students study a slide which shows the sun, an apple and a girl and asks them, how is it that the girl can see the apple? This leads to a discussion and the revealing of how rays of light move and reflect off the apple and into the girl’s eyes so that she can see the apple.
MAIN
The next activity involves the students grouping objects into luminous or non-luminous. There is differentiation via an activity sheet that can be provided to less able students if required.
MAIN
Students consider what a shadow is and how it is formed. This leads into a practical where students investigate how the size and position of shadows depends on the position of the light source and the distance to the object that creates the shadow.
PLENARY
In the plenary activity pupils complete a quiz which will uncover how much they have learnt during the lesson. Students who need further support set themselves 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 great lesson, there is nothing for you to do but order the equipment for the demo and class practical (simply hand your technician the printed off kit list.doc) and if necessary photocopy the activity sheet.
Thank you for looking, any feedback would be much appreciated :)
Lesson 1 in a series of 5.
Happy teaching,
Barclayfox.
Geocentric and Heliocentric models of the solar system, planets, moons, dwarf planets. Complete lesson. This is lesson 2 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’.
STUDENT OUTCOMES - are noted further down.
READY TO USE - no preparation required apart from (if you want) photocopying the work sheet (or you could simply project it and the students could write the answers in their books). The PPT guides you at every step!
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 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, a unique differentiated activity sheet, paired work, literacy activities, focused questions with answers and differentiation, picture puzzle, think/pair/share, quiz, mini test, sort into size order, homework, self-assessment opportunities, peer assessment opportunities etc. Lots of variety to keep learners happy, engaged and 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.
All resources are included in this excellent lesson, there is nothing for you to do but deliver it.
OUTCOMES - AT THE END OF THIS LESSON STUDENTS ARE ABLE TO:
* Understand the difference between moons, planets and dwarf planets.
* Explain the geocentric model of the solar system.
* Explain the heliocentric model of the solar system.
* Understand why Galileo supported the heliocentric model.
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.
A series of 6 high quality lessons that fully and expertly delivers all the key 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’.
THIS IS A BUNDLE 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.
3 x 1 hour lessons that cover:
*Eclipses (solar and lunar).
*Life cycle of average size and massive stars.
*Lenses, focal length and telescopes
3 x 1 hour lessons, complete and ready to use.
Aimed at 10 to 14 year olds.
Happy teaching,
Barclayfox.
High quality, complete and ready to use lesson. For use in KS3 and for lower and middle ability groups in KS4.
‘‘ECLIPSES’’ - STUDENT OUTCOMES:
By the end of the lesson students will be able to:
* Understand new key words such as eclipse, umbra, penumbra etc.
* Understand what solar and lunar eclipses are.
* Be able to explain what happens during a solar and lunar eclipse
* Be able to draw diagrams of a solar and a lunar eclipse.
STARTER
Pupils will start the lessons by thinking and working in pairs and doing a mini quiz. After discussion of the answers this leads on to revealing the title and lesson outcomes, students then self assess their current understanding of what this lesson is going to cover.
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, gap fill, carefully selected videos, paired work, literacy activities, focused questions with answers and differentiation, SMSC, quiz, homework, 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 an activity 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 practical kit and deliver the lesson.
THANK YOU FOR LOOKING:
Thanks for looking, your positive feedback would be very much appreciated :)
OTHER BARCLAYFOX SPACE LESSONS FOR STUDENTS BETWEEN 10 YEARS AND 14 YEARS OLD:
* Solar system, stars and galaxies and the universe.
* Geocentric and heliocentric solar system models
* Seasons.
* Gravity, weight and mass.
* Exploring and observing the universe.
* The moon’s phases.
* Eclipse
* Space travel
* Observations of the universe
* Day and night
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.
High quality, complete and ready to use lesson. For use in KS3 and for lower and middle ability groups in KS4.
‘‘LENSES, FOCAL LENGTH AND TELESCOPES’’ - STUDENT OUTCOMES:
By the end of the lesson students will be able to:
* Identify convex and concave lenses.
* Explain that lenses cause refraction and explain what it is.
* Draw a ray diagram for convex and concave lenses.
* Explain how to measure the focal length of a lens.
* Explain how a telescope works.
STARTER
Pupils will start the lessons by thinking about the outcomes presented and then self- assessing their current understanding of what this lesson is going to cover. This engages the students as they are actively thinking, and this then facilitates self-assessment of their individual progress at the end of the 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.
There are various student activities such as: practical / experiment, differentiated worksheet for the practical, gap fill, paired work, literacy activities, numeracy (differentiation), focused questions with answers and differentiation, quiz, homework, 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 an activity 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 practical kit, photocopy the 2 differentiated activity sheets and deliver the lesson.
THANK YOU FOR LOOKING:
Thanks for looking, your positive feedback would be very much appreciated :)
OTHER BARCLAYFOX SPACE LESSONS FOR STUDENTS BETWEEN 10 YEARS AND 14 YEARS OLD:
* Solar system, stars and galaxies and the universe.
* Geocentric and heliocentric solar system models
* Seasons.
* Gravity, weight and mass.
* Exploring and observing the universe.
* The moon’s phases.
* Eclipse
* Space travel
* Observations of the universe
* Day and night
* Lenses, focal length and telescopes.
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.
Complete and ready to use high quality KS3 Biology lesson
There is nothing for you to do but deliver it !
STUDENTS LEARN TO:
* Describe how a person develops immunity.
* Explain how vaccinations work.
* Compare the advantages and disadvantages of vaccinations.
* Investigate the spread of a pathogen by doing an experiment / practical
* Analyse the meaning of the experiment.
STARTER
Pupils will start the lessons by thinking and working in pairs in a race to name as many of the body’s defences against infection as they can.
This leads to revealing the title and lesson outcomes and then students think more deeply as they 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 create positive behaviour by keeping students interested and focused. There are various interesting student activities such as a practical experiment, gap fills, matching, play ball, literacy activity, questions with answers, recall, think/pair/share, quiz, self-assessment and peer assessment opportunities, up and about game etc.
PLENARY
In the plenary activity pupils complete a gap fill activity to uncover how much they have learnt during the lesson. Next they self assess and reflect on their progress against the lesson outcomes. Students who need further support set themselves additional homework to enhance the learning in today’s lesson.
EXTENSION ACTIVITIES
A good variety of extension activities are provided just in case any group you teach requires them.
Thank you for looking, this lesson will save you a huge amount of prep. time. :)
Other Barclayfox lessons in this series:
0. Bundle – contains all lessons (if available, not all series are bundled).
1. Vaccinations – lesson 1. (Vaccinations, immunity and Edward Jenner)
2. Vaccinations – lesson 2 - this lesson.
3. Antibiotics - lesson 1.
4. Antibiotics - lesson 2.
5. DNA, Darwin, evolution and Peer review.
6. Preventing extinction.
7. Revision lesson.
For more great lessons please type Barclayfox into the tes resources search engine to see all my lessons.
Happy teaching !
Barclayfox.
Search Words:
vaccine, vaccination, immunity, immune, virus, bacteria, role, Edward Jenner, medicine, antibiotics, science, scientific methodology, smallpox, cowpox, antibodies, illness, ill, cure, blood, white blood cell, fungus, germ, germs, disease, roll, MMR, Mumps, Measles, Rubella, vaccination,
German measles, HPV, human papilloma virus, cancer, immune system, injection, droplet, pathogen, antibody, skin, stomach acid, primary defences, etc
Complete KS3 Biology lesson
4 KEY STUDENT OUTCOMES:
Recall what antibiotics are and what they do…
Describe some methods for preventing the spread of bacterial infection…
Explain what is meant by antibiotic resistance and superbugs…
Challenge Mission: Demonstrate (using diagrams) how superbugs proliferate.
STARTER
Pupils start the lessons by working together to unscramble words that lead them to thinking about what the lesson is about. Next they think about the Los and self-assess against their current understanding of this topic and undertake a scientific literacy activity.
MAIN and MAIN and MAIN…
This lesson is ‘chunked’ into discrete sections to support learning and create positive behaviour by keeping students interested and focused. There is a very good variety of interesting student activities such as: up and about, gap fill, matching, literacy activities, quick quiz, recall, think/pair/share, questions with answers, self-assessment and peer assessment opportunities etc etc.
PLENARY
Learners self assess and reflect on their progress against the lesson outcomes.
EXTENSION ACTIVITIES
A good variety of extension activities are provided just in case any group you teach requires them.
Thank you for looking, this lesson will save you a huge amount of time and effort, if you choose to buy, your positive feedback on tes would be very much appreciated :)
Other Barclayfox lessons in this series:
0. Bundle – contains all lessons (if available, not all series are bundled).
1. Vaccinations – lesson 1. (Vaccinations, immunity and Edward Jenner)
2. Vaccinations – lesson 2. (Advantages & disadvantages of vaccinations, how pathogens spread etc)
3. Antibiotics - lesson 1. (Medicines, Fleming, penicillin and selecting an appropriate antibiotic)
4. Antibiotics - lesson 2. (Antibiotic resistance, super bugs, MRSA, resistant bacteria)
5. DNA & Darwin & evolution & Peer review. (Discovery of the structure of DNA, evolution etc)
6. Preventing extinction. (Preventing extinction, conservation, seed banks, captive breeding etc)
7. Revision lesson. (Vaccines, antibiotics, DNA, Evolution, extinction etc)
Happy teaching !
Barclayfox.
Search Words:
Superbugs, super bugs, resistance, resistant, antibiotics, Penicillin, Bio, Biology, Alexander Fleming, medicines, virus, bacteria, Doctor, nurse, medicine, syringe, petri dish, microscope, MRSA, science, scientific methodology, smallpox, cowpox, antibodies, illness, ill, cure, pathogen, antibody.
Complete and ready to use high quality KS3 Biology lesson.
All resources are included in this excellent lesson, there is nothing for you to do but deliver it !
LO’s:
Explain what DNA is and how it was discovered.
Describe the structure of DNA.
Use a mnemonic to recall base pairs.
Describe how scientists worked together/collaborated to discover the structure of DNA.
Name the father of the theory of evolution.
Explain what evolution is.
Understand peer review and how scientists collaborate.
Apply new literacy and numeracy skills.
Covers a lot of ground quickly but carefully. Use as 1 lesson or spread it over two.
STARTER
Pupils work together to figure out what today’s lesson is about. This leads the pupils to think about the Los and self-assess against their current understanding of this topic and undertake a scientific literacy activity.
MAIN and MAIN and MAIN…
This lesson is ‘chunked’ into discrete sections to support learning and create positive behaviour by keeping students interested and focused. There is a very good variety of interesting student activities such as: up and about, gap fill, numeracy, literacy activities, quiz questions, video, recall, think/pair/share, questions with answers, long answer question, self-assessment and peer assessment opportunities etc etc.
PLENARY
Learners self assess and reflect on their progress against the lesson outcomes.
EXTENSION ACTIVITIES
A good variety of extension activities are provided should any class require them.
Thank you for looking, this lesson will save you a huge amount of time and effort.
Other Barclayfox lessons in this series:
0. Bundle – contains all lessons (if available, not all series are bundled).
Vaccinations 1 - vaccinations, immunity and Edward Jenner
Vaccinations 2 - Advantages & disadvantages of vaccinations, how pathogens spread etc. 3. Antibiotics 1 - Medicines, Fleming, penicillin and selecting an appropriate antibiotic
Antibiotics 2 - Antibiotic resistance, super bugs, MRSA, resistant bacteria
This lesson
Preventing extinction, conservation, seed banks, captive breeding etc
Revision lesson. Vaccines, antibiotics, DNA, Evolution, extinction etc
Happy teaching ! Barclayfox.
Search Words:
DNA, genes, genetics, chromosomes, base pairs, TAGC, tigers, characteristics, Darwin, evolution, survival of the fittest, peer review, collaboration, Charles Darwin, evolve, etc
Complete and ready to use high quality KS3 Biology Revision lesson. All resources are included in this excellent lesson, save yourself lots of lesson preparation time!
Students revise by covering the following (again):
* Recall the roles of various scientists.
* Revise what vaccines and antibiotics are and what they do.
* Describe Edward Jenner’s experiment and its results.
* Understand the advantages and disadvantages of vaccines.
* Explain what superbugs are.
* Recall what DNA is, and what it does.
* Explain evolution.
* Explain how extinctions can be prevented.
STARTER
Pupils start the lessons by working together to work out which scientist made which contribution to science.
MAIN and MAIN and MAIN…
This lesson is ‘chunked’ into discrete sections to support learning and create positive behaviour by keeping students interested and focused. There is a very good variety of interesting student activities such as: up and about, gap fills, unscramble, literacy activities, questions, video, discussion, recall, think/pair/share, questions with answers, self-assessment and peer assessment opportunities etc etc.
PLENARY
Learners self assess and reflect on their progress against the lesson outcomes.
EXTENSION ACTIVITIES
Several extension activities are provided in case any group you teach requires them.
Thank you for looking, this lesson will save you a huge amount of time and effort. If you choose to buy, your positive feedback on tes would be very much appreciated :)
Other Barclayfox lessons in this series:
0. Bundle – contains all lessons (if available, not all series are bundled).
1. Vaccinations – lesson 1. (Vaccinations, immunity and Edward Jenner)
2. Vaccinations – lesson 2. (Advantages & disadvantages of vaccinations, how pathogens spread etc)
3. Antibiotics - lesson 1. (Medicines, Fleming, penicillin and selecting an appropriate antibiotic)
4. Antibiotics - lesson 2. (Antibiotic resistance, super bugs, MRSA, resistant bacteria)
5. DNA & Darwin & evolution & Peer review. (Discovery of the structure of DNA, evolution etc)
6. Preventing extinction. (Preventing extinction, conservation, seed banks, captive breeding etc)
7. Revision lesson. (All of the above - vaccines, antibiotics, DNA, Evolution, extinction etc)
Happy teaching !
Barclayfox.
Search Words:
Vaccinations, vaccines, Antibiotics, DNA, Darwin, evolution, extinction, conservation, seed banks, gene banks, zoo, safari park, captive breeding etc.
Complete and ready to use high quality KS3 Biology lesson from Barclayfox. All resources are included in this well differentiated excellent lesson, there is nothing for you to do but deliver it !
STUDENTS WILL LEARN TO:
* Understand what antibiotics can treat and what they cannot.
* Describe the use of antibiotics and how they work.
* Explain how Alexander Fleming discovered penicillin.
* Successfully complete an experiment to select an appropriate antibiotic.
STARTER
Pupils start the lessons by thinking about the Los and self-assessing against their current understanding of this topic and undertaking a scientific literacy activity.
MAIN and MAIN and MAIN…
This lesson is ‘chunked’ into discrete sections to support learning and create positive behaviour by keeping students interested and focused. There is a very good variety of interesting student activities such as a practical experiment, gap fill, matching, literacy activity, quick quiz, recall, think/pair/share, questions with answers, self-assessment and peer assessment opportunities etc etc.
PLENARY
Learners self assess and reflect on their progress against the lesson outcomes.
EXTENSION ACTIVITIES
A good variety of extension activities are provided just in case any group you teach requires them.
Thank you for looking, this lesson will save you a lot of time and effort, if you choose to buy your positive feedback on tes would be very much appreciated :)
Other Barclayfox lessons in this series:
0. Bundle – contains all lessons (if available, not all series are bundled).
1. Vaccinations – lesson 1. (Vaccinations, immunity and Edward Jenner)
2. Vaccinations – lesson 2. (Advantages & disadvantages of vaccinations, how pathogens spread etc)
3. Antibiotics - lesson 1. (Medicines, Fleming, penicillin and selecting an appropriate antibiotic)
4. Antibiotics - lesson 2. (Antibiotic resistance, super bugs, MRSA, resistant bacteria)
5. DNA & Darwin & evolution & Peer review. (Discovery of the structure of DNA, evolution etc)
6. Preventing extinction. (Preventing extinction, conservation, seed banks, captive breeding etc)
7. Revision lesson. (Vaccines, antibiotics, DNA, Evolution, extinction etc)
Happy teaching !
Barclayfox.
Search Words:
Antibiotics, Penicillin, Alexander Fleming, medicines, vaccine, vaccination, immunity, immune, virus, bacteria, Doctor, nurse, medicine, syringe, petri dish, microscope, illness, ill, cure, blood, white blood cell, fungus, germ, germs, disease, roll, MMR, Mumps, Measles, Rubella, vaccination, German measles, HPV, human papilloma virus, cancer, immune system, injection, droplet, observation, hypothesis, theory, experiment, pathogen, antibody, skin, stomach acid, primary defences, etc
This lesson is 4 in a series of 5
STARTER
Pupils become engaged in the lessons by thinking/working in pairs to solve a picture puzzle to find out what today’s lesson is about. After revealing the title and lesson outcomes students self assess against their current understanding of this topic. Next there is a scientific literacy Q and A activity to ensure all students learn the key words required to understand this lesson.
MAIN
Homework is set and then dispersion is demonstrated by the teacher, this is an opportunity for differentiation as high ability groups can do a short practical. There is a Q and A activity to bring out the key points.
MAIN
Dispersion is linked to the colours in a rainbow and how a rainbow is created. The standard ROY G BIV mnemonic for remembering the spectrum is introduced.
MAIN
Students study a slide which shows the sun, an apple and a girl and asks them, how is it that the girl can see that the apple is red in colour? This leads to a discussion and the revealing of how some colours are absorbed and some reflected off the apple and into the girl’s eyes so that she sees the apple as red. This progresses further into what effect different colours of light has on the colours that we see when looking at objects. Students then apply their new understanding to complete an activity and peer mark their answers.
MAIN
Students complete a practical experiment to investigate the effect of coloured filters on the colours that they can see. Next they look at the three RGB primary colours and the effects of adding them together.
PLENARY
A quiz - peer marked - which uncovers how much they have learnt during the lesson. Students self assess their understanding of this topic now they have reached the end of the lesson, and compare it to their previously self-assessed understanding at the start of the lesson. Students who need further support set themselves homework.
EXTENSION ACTIVITIES
A variety of activities are provided just in case any of your groups requires them either this year or in future years.
There is nothing for you to do but order the equipment for the class practical (simply hand your technician the printed off kit list.doc).
Thank you for looking, your feedback is much appreciated! :)
Lesson 4 in a series of 5.
Happy teaching,
Barclayfox.
This lesson is 3 in a series of 5 that expertly and fully delivers all the points within the NEW KS3 specification SoW on the “light” topic.
I find that this powerpoint and its interesting activities keep lower level students engaged during the lesson while allowing differentiation for higher achievers. I’m sure you’ll find it useful.
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.
STARTER
Pupils will start the lessons by thinking/working in pairs to solve a picture puzzle to find out what today’s lesson is about. After revealing the title and lesson outcomes students self assess against their current understanding of this topic. Next there is a scientific literacy Q&A activity to ensure all students learn the key words required to understand this lesson.
MAIN
The slides then move on to lead the students into understanding refraction. TTN is introduced as a means of working out whether refraction with bend light towards or away from the normal. Students then undertake an activity and apply TTN to predict the way the light bends at various boundaries between various mediums, they then self-assess using the answers provided.
MAIN
Next, the lesson focuses on two types of lenses, concave and convex. Diagrams are clear and help get the key points across succinctly and accurately. Students are shown incident rays into a concave lens and then try to predict and draw the ray diagram for the refracted rays.
MAIN
Students do a class practical with ray boxes and glass blocks to investigate refraction. Students share their results and observations and then undertake a quiz to bring out the key points from the experiment.
MAIN
Students do a gap fill activity – this can be differentiated by providing or not providing the missing words, they then and self-assess or peer assess using the answers provided.
MAIN
Refractive index is introduced and students undertake some calculations based around refractive index. This is peer-assessed using the model answers provided.
PLENARY
Each student self-assesses versus each of the objectives and marks their progress on their progress bars.
EXTENSION ACTIVITIES
A variety of activities are provided just in case any of your groups requires them either this year or in future years.
All resources are included in this great lesson, there is nothing for you to do but order the equipment for the class practical (simply hand your technician the printed off kit list.doc).
Thank you for looking, your feedback is much appreciated! :)
Lesson 3 in a series of 5.
Happy teaching,
Barclayfox.
This is a series of 5 lessons that expertly and fully delivers all the points within the NEW KS3 specification SoW on the light topic.
These PowerPoints and their varied and interesting activities keep lower ability students engaged while allowing differentiation for higher ability. I’m sure you’ll find them very useful.
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.
ACTIVITIES:
Practical experiments, demonstrations, anagrams, picture puzzles, differentiation, gap fills, matching activities, up and about, self and peer assessment, quizzes, videos, questioning, literacy etc etc etc. All answers are provided. Great variety, fun and engaging.
SPECIFICATION POINTS – COVERS ALL OF KS3 LIGHT SPEC - SOME ARE LISTED BELOW:
* Light travels in straight lines.
* Light travels much faster than sound.
* Speed of light.
* Calculations of speed.
* We see things because they reflect light into our eyes.
* Shadows are formed when light is blocked by an object.
* Recall how fast light travels.
* Investigate whether light travels in straight lines.
* Understand reflections, absorption and scatter.
* Understand “refraction” is when light changes direction and speed as it enters another medium.
* Work well as a team member during a “refraction” experiment.
* How lenses correct our sight
* Refractive index – and calculations
* How can we show all the colours that make up white light?
* Predict the colour that results when different colours are added together
* How do coloured filters affect white light?
* Understand that different colours are caused by light waves having different “frequencies”.
* Be able to name the parts of the eye.
* Understand the “function” of parts of the eye
* etc etc etc
All resources are included in these great lessons, there is nothing for you to do but print the activity sheets (if required) give the kit lists to your technicians and enjoy teaching it.
Thank you for looking, your feedback would be much appreciated! :)
Happy teaching,
Barclayfox.
I find that this PowerPoint and its varied and interesting activities keep lower level students engaged while allowing differentiation for higher achievers – see below for details. I’m sure you’ll find it useful.
This lesson is 5 in a series of 5 that fully delivers all the points within the NEW KS3 specification SoW on the “light” topic.
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.
STARTER
Pupils become engaged in the lessons by thinking/working in pairs to solve 5 anagrams to find out what today’s lesson is about (you could offer a prize for the winners). After revealing the title and lesson outcomes students self assess against their current understanding of this topic. Next there is a scientific literacy Q and A activity to ensure all students learn the key words required to understand this lesson.
MAIN
Homework is set and then students use the activity sheet (built into the PowerPoint – you just print it out) to work in pairs and label different parts of the eye, differentiation - higher ability explain the function of the parts. This can be self or peer assessed using the answers on the slide in the PowerPoint.
MAIN
Students undertake a matching activity to match the names of parts of the eye to their functions. This can be peer marked, and returned so that students can correct any errors / improve their work.
MAIN
Students recall the colours in the spectrum of white light, and this is developed into looking at the frequencies of the light and the relationship between colour and frequency. A gap fill activity promotes understanding of several key points and is self-assessed.
MAIN
Students watch a (carefully selected) short video that explain how our eyes see colour and then they have fun watching another video that tests their individual ability to see colours.
PLENARY
Students answer 5 questions by matching and then self-assess their understanding of the desired outcomes of today’s lesson now they have reached the end of the lesson. They compare their final understanding to their previously self-assessed understanding at the start of the lesson. Students who need further support set themselves homework to improve their learning of the content covered today.
EXTENSION ACTIVITIES
A variety of activities are provided just in case any of your groups requires them either this year or in future years.
All resources are included in this great lesson, there is nothing for you to do but print the activity sheet (if required) and enjoy teaching it.
Thank you for looking, your feedback would be much appreciated! :)
Lesson 5 in a series of 5.
Happy teaching,
Barclayfox.