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
Complete No-Prep lesson with exam quality questions, activities and answers on Gravity, Weight and Mass.
Written for KS3. However it covers GCSE content too and would be useful with lower ability GCSE classes.
High quality no-prep lessons so that busy teachers like you can teach excellent lessons without spending hours preparing and planning.
This high quality lesson delivered using PowerPoint includes explanations, different types of in-lesson activities and assessments (all with answers) and unique exam questions.
My lessons are ideal for both Physicists and non-Physicists – the lesson takes learners on a journey that carefully builds up their understanding step by step using literacy as one key element, while still going into the appropriate depth.
What’s Included:
• Teaching notes
• Starter / settling Activity
• Explanation slides in “chunked” sections.
• Worked examples of calculations / questions.
• Mnemonic.
• Gap fill & literacy activities.
• Unique Worksheet - with all answers.
• Exam-style questions covering the whole lesson content at the end of the lesson - these are unique, based on real exam questions not simply copied from exam boards.
• All easily editable to adapt to your teaching or to use in existing lessons.
The lesson is applicable to AQA, Edexcel and OCR exam specifications.
Happy Teaching
Barclayfox
A complete and ready to deliver high quality 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 to do but give it a quick look through and familiarise yourself with it.
Lesson objectives:
* Explain key words and phrases including “hypothesis”, “peer review”, “theory” and the “prediction”.
* Explain the scientific method and how new hypotheses are validated by other scientists before they are accepted.
* Understand trial by evidence.
This carefully crafted lesson is over 40 slides long, and is full of learning activities as below:
* Notes to help the teacher.
* Starter 1 - unscramble the words.
* Starter 2 - simple task where students self-assess themselves against the objectives.
* Matching task - answers are provided.
* Activity sheet - built into the powerpoint simply print this slide for each student.
* Unscramble the words race.
* Sequencing activity.
* Gap fill activity - all answers are provided.
* Quiz with answers.
* Questions – all answers are provided.
* Up and about activity
* Theory slides (carefully sculpted, interspaced with learning activities, not ‘death by powerpoint’).
* Differentiated questions with answers (ACTIVITY SHEETS built into powerpoint simply print them).
* Play ball.
* Paired work activities – answers are provided.
* Scientific literacy activity.
* Homework
* Plenary is the activity sheets.
* 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. 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
5-14. See this powerpoint for the list.
Thank you, and happy teaching,
Barclayfox.
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 a huge number of hours carefully planning it and writing differentiated resources, I have already spent those hours creating this great lesson. Furthermore it has been improved time and again after each use – it is a tried and tested excellent lesson.
There is nothing for you to do but give it a quick look through and familiarise yourself with it.
Lesson objectives:
* I can use the rate of change of momentum equation F = (mv-mu)/t.
* I know what impulse is and can complete calculations.
* I can explain how seat belts, airbags and crumple zones etc work.
This carefully crafted lesson is over 40 slides long, and is full of learning activities as below:
* Notes to help the teacher.
* Starter - matching names, symbols and units.
* Starter - simple task where students self-assess against the objectives.
* Matching task - answers are provided (this is the starter).
* Activity sheet - differentiated GOLD and PLATINUM.
* Answers are provided.
* Quiz with answers.
* Differentiated Questions in the powerpoint – all answers are provided.
* Peer marking
* Self 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 – answers are provided.
* Homework
* Plenary formative/summative assessment quiz / activity.
* 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. Bundle – contains all lessons (if available, not all my series are bundled)
1. Momentum.
2. Conservation of momentum, collisions, elastic and inelastic.
3. Momentum, impulse, crumple zones and safety.
Thank you, and happy teaching!
Yours,
Barclayfox.
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.
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.
KS3 waves. These contain many varied student focused activities: practical experiments, gap fills, teacher demos, matching, sequencing, high quality video clips, quizzes, science focused numeracy and literacy, topic based Q&A throughout. Complete and ready to use. High quality and engaging lessons from Barclayfox.
Please don’t waste hour after hour after hour carefully creating lessons . I’ve already done that, these lessons have been successfully used and improved many times spread over 10+ years !
There is nothing to do - pick them up and use them.
The 4 lessons in this Barclayfox bundle are:
Waves (parts of a wave (PTAW), transverse, longitudinal, reflection, superposition etc)
Loudness and pitch (amplitude, frequency, sound vs light, speeds, hearing range etc)
The Ear (it’s parts and their function, loudness and ear damage, dB scale etc)
Echoes and ultrasound (baby scans, fish finders, distance calculations, dolphins etc)
If you want to know the details about each lesson just click on the images below
Save yourself time, save yourself, hit the buy button now !
Encouragement and feedback welcome :-D
Happy teaching!
Yours,
Barclayfox.
This allows for students to better understand the Radiation topic with a simple activity
Card sort activity comes complete with answers so can be used on mulit level learning.
Great activity to engage and support active independent learning.
This is the worksheet that comes as part of my alpha, beta, gamma radiation lesson which you can find here:
https://www.tes.com/teaching-resource/alpha-beta-and-gamma-ionising-radiation-nuclear-radiation-and-ions-complete-lesson-11262725
Happy teaching!
Barclayfox
Gas Laws worksheet with answers
Initially it teaches by providing some hints on using the gas laws of Boyles, Charles and Guy-Lussac
Then the students do the questions.
Answers included.
8 small questions, plus,
4 larger calculation questions covering:
2 x Boyle’s,
1 x Charles’,
1 x Guy-Lussac.
Happy teaching,
barclayfox
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 and ready to deliver KS3 lesson.
Lesson objectives:
* Explain that radioactive elements are unstable and emit alpha or beta particles when they change into other elements.
* Explain what happens to the nucleus during alpha decay and beta decay and gamma decay.
* Successfully write decay equations / nuclear equations.
This carefully crafted lesson is over 40 slides long, and is full of learning activities as below:
* Notes to help the teacher.
* Starter – activity sheet (built into this powerpoint just print this one slide for each student, or project it)
* Starter - simple task where students self-assess themselves against the objectives.
* Activity sheet - built into this powerpoint just print this one slide for each student - ore project it.
* Gap fill activity - all answers are provided.
* Quiz with answers.
* Questions – all answers are provided.
* Theory slides (carefully sculpted, interspaced with learning activities, not ‘death by powerpoint’).
* Physical model build activity - various colours of plasticine are required.
* Kinaesthetic activity (as above) – to aid recall.
* Play ball
* Paired work activities – answers are provided.
* Plenary formative/summative assessment quiz / activity.
* Student self-assessment versus objectives activity – so learners can judge for themselves how much they have learnt.
You’ve found what you need, waste no more of your valuable time!
This lesson is part of a series, and 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.
4. Changes in the nucleus – decay equations (THIS LESSON)
5. Activity and half life
6. Activity practicals
7. Dangers and precautions
8. Nuclear radiation in medicine (uses in medicine)
9 to 13. Etc etc please search for “Barclayfox” on TES.
Happy teaching!
Barclayfox.
A complete and ready to deliver high quality GCSE lesson.
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 to do but give it a quick look through and familiarise yourself with it.
Lesson objectives:
* Know what radon gas is, where it comes from and why it is dangerous.
* Understand power stations produce dangerous radioactive waste and explain disposal methods.
* Form your own opinions about nuclear power and its safety after studying the Chernobyl and Fukushima incidents.
This carefully crafted lesson is over 40 slides long, and is full of learning activities as below:
* Notes to help the teacher.
* Help sheet (can be given to all, or only to those that the plenary shows found the lesson difficult, or given later to students who missed the lesson).
* Starter - simple task where students self-assess themselves against the objectives.
* Sequencing activity.
* Gap fill activity - all answers are provided.
* Quiz with answers.
* Questions – all answers are provided.
* Theory slides (carefully sculpted, interspaced with learning activities, not ‘death by powerpoint’).
* Video clip link (carefully selected – this alone can save you 20+ minutes of searching).
* Play ball.
* Paired work activities – answers are provided.
* Scientific literacy activity.
* Plenary formative/summative assessment quiz / activity.
* 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. 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.
4. Changes in the nucleus – decay equations
5. Activity and half life
6. Activity and half life practicals
7. Dangers and precautions
8 to 14 - are listed in the powerpoint
Thank you, and happy teaching!
Yours,
Barclayfox.
A complete, and ready to deliver, high quality KS4 / GCSE lesson from Barclayfox, no work required!
Can be used by the teacher or for home learning - the Powerpoint easily navigates you thro’ the lesson even if you have not had time to review it before the lesson!
Lesson objectives:
- Understand what “nuclei” and “radioactivity” and “decay”etc mean.
- Explain and understand “half life”.
- Use radioactive decay graphs to find half life.
- Use maths / numbers to find half life.
The lesson contains:
Animation (unique).
Differentiated activity sheets (HA and MA/LA).
Activity sheet answers.
Notes to help the teacher.
Starter task where students self-assess themselves against each objective.
Scientific literacy activities.
Homework (capable groups could do this in class).
Questions (lots and lots) – all answers are provided.
Paired work activities with answers.
Gap fills
Theory slides (minimal and carefully sculpted – not ‘death by powerpoint’)
Video clip links x 2 (carefully selected – this alone can easily save you 20+ minutes).
Student self-assessment versus objectives activity – so learners can judge for themselves how much they have learnt
BONUS materials:
A ppt for students to go on your VLE / shared area.
A short version of the master lesson.
Don’t waste any more time searching, you’ve found an excellent lesson - buy it now!
Thank you for your time, happy teaching.
Yours,
Barclayfox.
This is a revision lesson that makes use of many games, activities, work sheets and loop puzzles to revise the following:-
Radioactivity, radiation, atoms, isotopes, activity, half life, alpha, beta, gamma, the discovery of the nucleus, changes in the nucleus, alpha scattering.
Rutherford, how our model of the atom has changed over time, radiation uses and dangers, nuclear radiation in medicine, fission and fusion.
Excellent tried and tested resources which are ready to be used, and some of which are differentiated.
Answer sheets are also provided to allow student independence and peer or self assessment.
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. 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.
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. Electricity from nuclear power.
11. Nuclear Fusion and our sun.
12. Nuclear issues including waste
13. Prediction, theory acceptance and peer review
14. Revision Lesson - THIS ONE
Thank you, and happy teaching!
Yours,
Barclayfox.
A bundle of high quality, ready to deliver, GCSE lessons by Barclayfox. Contains all 14 lessons in this series as listed below.
There is nothing for you to do, these excellent lessons are ready to use !
You can use the whole series or individually as required.
This is a MASSIVE 46% saving over buying each lesson individually. Fantastic value for money.
1. Atoms, radiation 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. Activity practicals
7. Dangers and precautions.
8. Nuclear radiation in medicine (uses in medicine)
9. Nuclear fission and chain reactions (nuclear power).
10. Electricity from nuclear power.
11. Nuclear Fusion and our sun.
12. Nuclear issues including waste
13. Hypotheses, prediction, theory acceptance and peer review
14. Revision
Happy teaching!
Barclayfox.
3 high quality, complete lessons by Barclayfox which are ready to teach. They include many different activities including differentiated worksheets and answers.
Nothing for you to do but quickly scan through them and photocopy the activity sheets.
Covers:
1) Momentum, what it is a measure of, units, equation, calculations, answers.
2) Conservation of momentum, collisions, crashes, explosions, elastic and inelastic collisions, questions and calculations and answers.
3) Rate of change of momentum, the equation, and using it, impulse, Safety including: crumple zones, air bags, seat belts cycle helmets, etc. Lots of questions and calculations with all answers provided.
If you need more detail please see the individual lessons for a list of contents.
Happy teaching!
Barclayfox.
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.
Over 300 PowerPoint slides spread over 12 rounds of quizzes and activities. Nothing to do but open up the PowerPoint and have fun with your classes this Christmas ! Student lead throughout - so you can finally RELAX !!! Movies, maths, pop music, English, up and about, physics, cities and flags, geography, Thinking, chemistry, observation, biology, sport, music clips to identify and sing along to, movie clips etc. Fun, entertaining, engaging. A REAL FUN BARGAIN AT THIS PRICE!!!
Happy Teaching and a Happy Christmas,
Barclayfox.