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I started out as a science teacher and made the transition to teaching ICT and Computer Science, which I have now been doing for over 20 years. I have also worked with primary school teachers to support their delivery of the national curriculum in computing. Edulito is a UK based educational publishing company that provides learning resources for school-aged children. All of the available resources have been tested in UK schools.

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I started out as a science teacher and made the transition to teaching ICT and Computer Science, which I have now been doing for over 20 years. I have also worked with primary school teachers to support their delivery of the national curriculum in computing. Edulito is a UK based educational publishing company that provides learning resources for school-aged children. All of the available resources have been tested in UK schools.
4 PRACTICE EXAM PAPERS - GCSE COMPUTER SCIENCE OCR J277 (FROM 2020)
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4 PRACTICE EXAM PAPERS - GCSE COMPUTER SCIENCE OCR J277 (FROM 2020)

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This pack includes four practice exam papers with mark schemes for OCR GCSE Computer Science (9–1) specification (first teaching September 2020, examinations from 2022). These papers provide students with an opportunity to familiarise themselves with the look and feel of an OCR paper. The digital pack includes: · two practice papers for Computer Systems (Paper 1) · two practice papers for Computational thinking, algorithms and programming (Paper 2) The papers combined cover all aspects of the computer science curriculum. You will also receive a comprehensive mark scheme for each paper.
13 TOPIC TESTS - AQA GCSE COMPUTER SCIENCE 8525 (FROM 2020)
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13 TOPIC TESTS - AQA GCSE COMPUTER SCIENCE 8525 (FROM 2020)

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This pack consists of 13 end of topic tests that can be used to support your delivery of the course. In addition, the topic test bundle also contains a mark scheme for each test. Unit 3.1 – 1 Test Unit 3.2 – 2 Tests Unit 3.3 – 1 Test Unit 3.4 – 4 Tests Unit 3.5 - 2 Test Unit 3.6 – 1 Test Unit 3.7 – 1 Test Unit 3.8 – 1 Test
37 HOMEWORK ACTIVITIES - OCR GCSE COMPUTER SCIENCE J277 (FROM 2020)
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37 HOMEWORK ACTIVITIES - OCR GCSE COMPUTER SCIENCE J277 (FROM 2020)

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This pack consists of 37 editable homework/classwork activities that can be used to support your delivery of the Computer Science GCSE course. In addition, the homework bundle also contains a suggested mark scheme for each activity. Unit 1.1 · Components of a CPU · CPU Performance · Embedded Systems Unit 1.2 · ROM & RAM · Flash Memory & Virtual Memory · Data Capacity · Storage Comparison · Data Storage · Compression Unit 1.3 · LANS & WANS · Wired & Wireless Networks · Star & Mesh Topology · Network Protocols · The Concept of Layers Unit 1.4 · Malware · Network Threats · Network Vulnerabilities Unit 1.5 · Operating Systems · Utility Software Unit 1.6 · The Impacts of Technology · The Digital Divide · Legislation + Proprietary and Open Source Software Unit 2.1 · Decomposition & Abstraction · Flowcharts & Programs · Sorting Data · Sorting & Searching Programs Unit 2.2 · Selection · Iteration · Arrays (Lists) · Functions Unit 2.3 · Authentication · Maintainability · Testing Unit 2.4 · Boolean Logic & Truth Tables · Logic Gates Unit 2.5 · Programming Languages · IDEs
TEACHER POWERPOINTS BUNDLE: GCSE COMPUTER SCIENCE COMPONENT 1 & 2 - OCR J277
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TEACHER POWERPOINTS BUNDLE: GCSE COMPUTER SCIENCE COMPONENT 1 & 2 - OCR J277

15 Resources
These adaptable PowerPoint Presentations (836 Slides) cover all aspects of the specification in relation to OCR GCSE Computer Science J277 (from 2020). Component 1 - Computer Systems Component 2 - Computational thinking, algorithms and programming. It includes: Teaching PowerPoint Presentations (including checkpoint questions and answers) 800+Slides Student PowerPoint Presentations (Including checkpoint questions, but omits the answers) A Complete Guide to Python Programming (including student activities) Content Covered: 1.1 Systems architecture 1.2 Memory and storage 1.3 Computer networks, connections and protocols 1.4 Network security 1.5 Systems software 1.6 Ethical, legal, cultural and environmental impacts of digital technology 2.1 Algorithms 2.2 Programming fundamentals 2.3 Producing robust programs 2.4 Boolean logic 2.5 Programming languages and Integrated Development Environments
Systems Architecture Test - GCSE Computer Science
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Systems Architecture Test - GCSE Computer Science

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This photocopiable resource has been produced to ensure that your students are able to successfully complete their GCSE Computer Science GCSE (9-1), but can also be used by other exam systems. This test is designed to provide a stimulating, engaging and effective way of assessing the progress of your students. As well as the topic test, you are also provided with a comprehensive marking scheme. Please be aware that there may be appropriate alternative answers to some of the questions, and it is therefore suggested that the teacher uses their discretion when marking students work.
Five Christmas Coding Activities using Scratch 3.0
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Five Christmas Coding Activities using Scratch 3.0

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This activity pack contains five Christmas themed coding activities which can be used by students in KS2 and KS3. Students learn about sequence, selection and iteration, as well as how to use variables and arrays. All instructions on how to develop the code using Scratch 3.0 have been included, as well as several challenges for each activity. The pack is 35 pages and will take around 3 hours to complete all activities and challenges. Activity 1 - Decorating the living room ready for Christmas - Make the Christmas decorations sparkle! Activity 2 - Dancing Santa - Get Santa to dance - simple dances to choreographed dances. Activity 3 - Christmas Gift Game - Christmas presents float around the screen and if you can click on a present you get to see what’s inside! Activity 4 - Catch the Reindeer Game - In this game Santa has lost his reindeer (including Rudolph) and he has to catch them. At the same time he must avoid the dog pretending to be a reindeer. Activity 5 - Naughty or Nice - In this activity Santa must check the Nice list before he gives a present. The Python Programming Christmas Activities is designed for KS4.
TEACHER POWERPOINTS: UNIT 1.2 MEMORY & STORAGE J277 (FROM 2020)
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TEACHER POWERPOINTS: UNIT 1.2 MEMORY & STORAGE J277 (FROM 2020)

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These adaptable PowerPoint Presentations (188 Slides) cover all aspects of the specification in relation to OCR GCSE Computer Science J277 (from 2020) component 1.2. It includes: Teaching PowerPoint Presentations (including checkpoint questions and answers) Part 1 – Memory (33 Slides) Part 2 – Secondary Storage (45 Slides) Part 3 – Data Storage – Numbers (49 Slides) Part 4 - Data Storage: Characters, Images & Sound (61 Slides) Student PowerPoint Presentations (Including checkpoint questions, but omits the answers) Part 1 – Memory Part 2 – Secondary Storage Part 3 – Data Storage – Numbers Part 4 - Data Storage: Characters, Images & Sound Content Covered: The need for primary storage The difference between RAM and ROM The purpose of ROM in a computer system The purpose of RAM in a computer system Virtual memory The need for secondary storage Common types of storage: Optical Magnetic Solid state Suitable storage devices and storage media for a given application The advantages and disadvantages of different storage devices and storage media relating to these characteristics: Capacity Speed Portability Durability Reliability Cost The units of data storage: Bit Nibble (4 bits) Byte (8 bits) Kilobyte (1,000 bytes or 1 KB) Megabyte (1,000 KB) Gigabyte (1,000 MB) Terabyte (1,000 GB) Petabyte (1,000 TB) How data needs to be converted into a binary format to be processed by a computer Data capacity and calculation of data capacity requirements Numbers How to convert positive denary whole numbers to binary numbers (up to and including 8 bits) and vice versa How to add two binary integers together (up to and including 8 bits) and explain overflow errors which may occur How to convert positive denary whole numbers into 2-digit hexadecimal numbers and vice versa How to convert binary integers to their hexadecimal equivalents and vice versa Binary shifts Characters The use of binary codes to represent characters The term ‘character set’ The relationship between the number of bits per character in a character set, and the number of characters which can be represented, e.g.: ASCII Unicode Images How an image is represented as a series of pixels, represented in binary Metadata The effect of colour depth and resolution on: The quality of the image The size of an image file Sound How sound can be sampled and stored in digital form The effect of sample rate, duration and bit depth on: The playback quality The size of a sound file The need for compression Types of compression: Lossy Lossless
TEACHER POWERPOINTS: UNIT 3.5 FUNDAMENTALS OF COMPUTER NETWORKS 8525 (FROM 2020)
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TEACHER POWERPOINTS: UNIT 3.5 FUNDAMENTALS OF COMPUTER NETWORKS 8525 (FROM 2020)

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These adaptable PowerPoint Presentations (69 Slides) cover all aspects of the specification in relation to AQA GCSE Computer Science 8525 (from 2020) component 3.5. It includes: Teaching PowerPoints (including checkpoint questions and answers) - 69 slides Student PowerPoints (Including checkpoint questions, but omits the answers) Content Covered: Define what a computer network is. Discuss the advantages and disadvantages of computer networks. Describe the main types of computer network including: • Personal Area Network (PAN) • Local Area Network (LAN) • Wide Area Network (WAN). Understand that networks can be wired or wireless. Discuss the advantages and disadvantages of wireless networks as opposed to wired networks. Describe the following common LAN topologies: • star • bus. Define the term network protocol. Explain the purpose and use of common network protocols including: • Ethernet • Wi-Fi • TCP (Transmission Control Protocol) • UDP (User Datagram Protocol) • IP (Internet Protocol) • HTTP (Hypertext Transfer Protocol) • HTTPS (Hypertext Transfer Protocol Secure) • FTP (File Transfer Protocol) • email protocols: • SMTP (Simple Mail Transfer Protocol) • IMAP (Internet Message Access Protocol). Understand the need for, and importance of, network security. Explain the following methods of network security: • authentication • encryption • firewall • MAC address filtering. Describe the 4-layer TCP/IP model: • application layer • transport layer • internet layer • link layer. Understand that the HTTP, HTTPS, SMTP, IMAP and FTP protocols operate at the application layer. Understand that the TCP and UDP protocols operate at the transport layer. Understand that the IP protocol operates at the internet layer.
TEACHER POWERPOINTS: UNIT 2.3 PRODUCING ROBUST PROGRAMS J277 (FROM 2020)
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TEACHER POWERPOINTS: UNIT 2.3 PRODUCING ROBUST PROGRAMS J277 (FROM 2020)

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These adaptable PowerPoint Presentations (50 Slides) cover all aspects of the specification in relation to OCR GCSE Computer Science J277 (from 2020) component 2.3. It includes: Teaching PowerPoint Presentations (includes checkpoint questions and answers) Student PowerPoint Presentations (Includes checkpoint questions, but omits the answers) Content Covered: Defensive design considerations: Anticipating misuse Authentication Input validation Maintainability: Use of sub programs Naming conventions Indentation Commenting The purpose of testing Types of testing: Iterative Final/terminal Identify syntax and logic errors Selecting and using suitable test data: Normal Boundary Invalid Erroneous Refining algorithms
TEACHER POWERPOINTS: UNIT 2.1 ALGORITHMS J277 (FROM 2020)
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TEACHER POWERPOINTS: UNIT 2.1 ALGORITHMS J277 (FROM 2020)

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These adaptable PowerPoint Presentations (86 Slides) cover all aspects of the specification in relation to OCR GCSE Computer Science J277 (from 2020) component 2.1. It includes: Teaching PowerPoints (includes checkpoint questions and answers) Student PowerPoints (Includes checkpoint questions, but omits the answers) Content Covered: Principles of computational thinking: Abstraction Decomposition Algorithmic thinking Identify the inputs, processes, and outputs for a problem Structure diagrams Create, interpret, correct, complete, and refine algorithms using: Pseudocode Flowcharts Reference language/high-level programming language Identify common errors Trace tables Standard searching algorithms: Binary search Linear search Standard sorting algorithms: Bubble sort Merge sort Insertion sort
KS3 Unit - What is Computational Thinking?
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KS3 Unit - What is Computational Thinking?

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This unit provides detailed teaching resources to teach students about computational thinking and includes at least 6 hours of lessons.Students develop simple algorithms and learn about key terminology such decomposition, abstraction and pattern recognition. This unit includes a: PowerPoint presentation (43 Slides) PDF teaching file Unit Test (including mark scheme) These resources can be used by a computing teacher or a non-specialist teacher to teach about computational thinking. This unit can be taught in a classroom with no computers. What will students learn in Unit 1? ALL STUDENTS • I understand the terms algorithm, decompose, abstraction and pattern recognition. • I can produce a simple algorithm that solves a problem. MOST STUDENTS • I can produce an algorithm that solves a problem. • I can apply the terms algorithm, decompose, abstraction and pattern recognition. SOME STUDENTS • I can compare two algorithms that perform the same task and understand why one algorithm is more efficient than another algorithm.
TEACHER POWERPOINTS: UNIT 2.5 PROGRAMMING LANGUAGES AND IDES J277 (FROM 2020)
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TEACHER POWERPOINTS: UNIT 2.5 PROGRAMMING LANGUAGES AND IDES J277 (FROM 2020)

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These adaptable PowerPoint Presentations (31 Slides) cover all aspects of the specification in relation to OCR GCSE Computer Science J277 (from 2020) component 2.5. It includes: Teaching PowerPoint Presenations (includes checkpoint questions and answers) Student PowerPoint Presentations (Includes checkpoint questions, but omits the answers) Content Covered: Characteristics and purpose of different levels of programming language: High-level languages Low-level languages The purpose of translators The characteristics of a compiler and an interpreter Common tools and facilities available in an Integrated Development Environment (IDE): Editors Error diagnostics Run-time environment Translators
4 PRACTICE EXAM PAPERS - GCSE COMPUTER SCIENCE EDEXCEL 1CP2 (FROM 2020)
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4 PRACTICE EXAM PAPERS - GCSE COMPUTER SCIENCE EDEXCEL 1CP2 (FROM 2020)

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This pack includes four practice exam papers with mark schemes for Edexcel GCSE Computer Science (9–1) specification (first teaching September 2020, examinations from 2022). The papers have been written to replicate the style of Edexcel examinations. These papers provide students with an opportunity to familiarise themselves with the look and feel of an Edexcel paper. Python is the programming language used. The digital pack includes: · two practice papers for Principles of Computer Science (Paper 1) · two practice papers for Application of Computational Thinking (Paper 2) – Included with these papers are Python files for access by students during the exam and a complete set of Python file solutions. The papers combined cover all aspects of the computer science curriculum. You will also receive a comprehensive mark scheme for each paper.
4 PRACTICE EXAM PAPERS - GCSE COMPUTER SCIENCE AQA 8525 (FROM 2020)
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4 PRACTICE EXAM PAPERS - GCSE COMPUTER SCIENCE AQA 8525 (FROM 2020)

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This pack includes four practice exam papers with mark schemes for AQA GCSE Computer Science (9–1) specification (first teaching September 2020, examinations from 2022). The papers have been written to replicate the style of AQA examinations. These papers provide students with an opportunity to familiarise themselves with the look and feel of an AQA paper. The digital pack includes: · two practice papers for Computational Thinking and Programming Skills (Paper 1) · two practice papers for Computing Concepts (Paper 2) The papers combined cover all aspects of the computer science curriculum. You will also receive a comprehensive mark scheme for each paper.
30 HOMEWORK ACTIVITIES - EDEXCEL GCSE COMPUTER SCIENCE 1CP2 (FROM 2020)
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30 HOMEWORK ACTIVITIES - EDEXCEL GCSE COMPUTER SCIENCE 1CP2 (FROM 2020)

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This pack consists of 30 editable homework/classwork activities that can be used to support your delivery of the course. In addition, the homework pack also contains a suggested mark scheme for each activity. Topic 1 & 6 · Decomposition and Abstraction · Flowcharts and Programs · Sorting Data · Sorting and Searching Programs · Selection · Arrays (Lists) · Functions · Improving Programs · Testing Topic 2 · Data Capacity · Conversions · Compression Topic 3 · Components of a CPU · CPU Performance · Embedded Systems · Storage Comparison · Operating Systems · Utility Software · Authentication · Programming Languages Topic 4 · LANS and WANS · Wired and Wireless Networks · Star and Mesh Networks · Network Protocols · The Concept of Layers Topic 5 · The Impact of Technology · The Environment · Social & Work Issues · Network Vulnerabilities
KS3 Unit - Computer Hardware - What is a Computer?
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KS3 Unit - Computer Hardware - What is a Computer?

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This unit provides at least 6 hours of KS3 lessons on the use computer hardware components in a computer system. At the end of the units students are provided with an assessment to assess their progress. This unit includes a: PowerPoint presentation (56 Slides) PDF teaching file Unit Test (including mark scheme) These resources can be used by a computing teacher or a non-specialist teacher to teach “What is a Computer?”. This unit can be taught in a classroom with no computers. What will students learn? ALL STUDENTS • I can identify the main hardware components (CPU, RAM, Motherboard, HDD, SSD, PSU and GPU) and software components (operating system, application software) that make up a computer system. • I understand that devices such as smart phones and tablets are computer systems MOST STUDENTS • I can explain the role the main hardware components (CPU, RAM, Motherboard, HDD, PSU and GPU) and software components (operating system, application software) that make up a computer system. • I understand the role of input, output and storage devices. SOME STUDENTS • I can select the components of a computer system to ensure that they meet the needs of a user.
TEACHER POWERPOINTS: UNIT 3.8 IMPACTS OF DIGITAL TECHNOLOGY 8525 (FROM (20
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TEACHER POWERPOINTS: UNIT 3.8 IMPACTS OF DIGITAL TECHNOLOGY 8525 (FROM (20

(0)
These adaptable PowerPoint Presentations (38 Slides) cover all aspects of the specification in relation to AQA GCSE Computer Science 8525 (from 2020) component 3.8. It includes: Teaching PowerPoint Presentations (includes checkpoint questions and answers) - 38 slides Student PowerPoint Presentations (Includes checkpoint questions, but omits the answers) Content Covered: Explain the current ethical, legal and environmental impacts and risks of digital technology on society. Where data privacy issues arise, these should be considered. Exam questions will be taken from the following areas: • cyber security • mobile technologies • wireless networking • cloud storage • hacking (unauthorised access to a computer system) • wearable technologies • computer-based implants • autonomous vehicles.
Learn Coding Concepts using Python
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Learn Coding Concepts using Python

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This photocopiable resource has been produced to provide 7 to 14 year old students with exciting and engaging opportunities to learn coding concepts using the Python programming language. There are enough activities for 4 to 5 lessons. Including: Algorithms Sequences Iteration (Repetition) Selection Variables The resource covers the programming aspect of the computing national curriculum. use two or more programming languages, at least one of which is textual, to solve a variety of computational problems make appropriate use of data structures [for example, lists, tables or arrays] design and develop modular programs that use procedures or functions.
KS3 Computing National Curriculum Assessment Criteria
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KS3 Computing National Curriculum Assessment Criteria

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The assessment criteria shown below have been developed to provide a broader range of assessment opportunities for students of all abilities. Each national curriculum statement has been broken down into three distinct levels from bronze (A) to silver (B) to gold ©. Individual student performance can be recorded, providing a map of progress across the whole curriculum. Students can use this mapping to independently identify how they are progressing and this data can also be shared with parents.
Python Video Tutorial #1 An Introduction to Python
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Python Video Tutorial #1 An Introduction to Python

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This is the first lesson in a series teaching Python Programming. It really starts at the very beginning. It’s designed to be used by children and adults with no experience of programming. Python and the Python Logo are trademarks or registered trade marks of the Python Software Foundation.