Green APL specialises in developing highly useful resources which can be used in the classroom and beyond. Our mission is to help educate the next generation of successful people by producing high quality resources which improve teaching and learning.
We cover a wide range of subjects and age groups with our resources which mostly have a science or mathematics focus.
Green APL specialises in developing highly useful resources which can be used in the classroom and beyond. Our mission is to help educate the next generation of successful people by producing high quality resources which improve teaching and learning.
We cover a wide range of subjects and age groups with our resources which mostly have a science or mathematics focus.
A PowerPoint which can be used to teach students about formulae, functional groups and naming organic compounds.
It is aimed at 16 to 18 year olds studying A level chemistry. The PowerPoint gives plenty of practise naming different organic molecules, with different functional groups.
For FREE Phosphor resources to engage your students in current scientific issues go to: phosphorescience.com
Quickly engage your children with important scientific issues that affect their daily life such as the environment, climate change and health.
We provide all the tools to bring science to life, contextualising learning through illustrated articles and worksheets. Our materials allow you to quickly engage children with important issues that affect their daily life such as the environment, climate change and health. Our resources are developed to boost scientific literacy, increase science vocabulary and promote independent learning.
Hydrogen Power
Humans burn fuels – lots of them. We burn fuels to power our vehicles and keep our homes warm. But there is a problem, the fuels we burn, such as oil and gas, release pollutants into the atmosphere like carbon dioxide. If only there was a cleaner fuel that released no pollution…
Burning is a chemical reaction called combustion. Combustion is an oxidation reaction because during combustion the fuel reacts with oxygen and oxides are produced. Let’s look at burning natural gas as an example. Natural gas is also called methane. It is the gas you might burn at home in your central heating and oven.
For more FREE Phosphor resources to engage your students in current scientific issues go to: phosphorescience.com
Quickly engage your children with important scientific issues that affect their daily life such as the environment, climate change and health.
We provide all the tools to bring science to life, contextualising learning through illustrated articles and worksheets. Our materials allow you to quickly engage children with important issues that affect their daily life such as the environment, climate change and health. Our resources are developed to boost scientific literacy, increase science vocabulary and promote independent learning.
Seeing With Sound
Some animals, like bats and dolphins, use sound instead of light to work out the location of objects. This is called echolocation. It allows the animal to move around in the dark so they can find food and avoid bumping into things. Incredibly, blind people can also learn to use echolocation.
You are able to read these words because you can see them. Maybe you are reading them off the screen of a mobile device. A screen emits (gives out) light. It is a light source,or luminous object.The light from the screen travels in a straight line and enters your eyes, so you can see the words. Light-sensitive cells in the back of your eye detect the light and send messages along a nerve to your brain.
For more FREE Phosphor resources to engage your students in current scientific issues go to: phosphorescience.com
Quickly engage your children with important scientific issues that affect their daily life such as the environment, climate change and health.
We provide all the tools to bring science to life, contextualising learning through illustrated articles and worksheets. Our materials allow you to quickly engage children with important issues that affect their daily life such as the environment, climate change and health. Our resources are developed to boost scientific literacy, increase science vocabulary and promote independent learning.
Galaxies Galore
When you look out into the night sky, all of the stars you can see belong to our galaxy – the Milky Way.
But they are not the only stars that exist – the Universe is home to many, many more. These other stars belong to other galaxies, but you will need a telescope to see them.
What is a galaxy?
A galaxy is a collection of billions of stars and their solar systems held together by gravity.
They come in all different shapes and sizes.
For more FREE Phosphor resources to engage your students in current scientific issues go to: phosphorescience.com
Quickly engage your children with important scientific issues that affect their daily life such as the environment, climate change and health.
We provide all the tools to bring science to life, contextualising learning through illustrated articles and worksheets. Our materials allow you to quickly engage children with important issues that affect their daily life such as the environment, climate change and health. Our resources are developed to boost scientific literacy, increase science vocabulary and promote independent learning.
Carbon capture
Scientists agree that humans are responsible for climate change. We are burning fuels and putting too much carbon dioxide into the atmosphere. Governments across the globe are coming up with ways of reducing carbon dioxide emissions – one of these is called carbon capture.
In 2015 Governments from across Europe met in Paris to discuss a very important topic – climate change.They made an agreement to do everything they could to reduce the amount of carbon dioxide gas entering the atmosphere.They also planned to meet every five years to report to each other and the public about how things were progressing.
For more FREE Phosphor resources to engage your students in current scientific issues go to: phosphorescience.com
Quickly engage your children with important scientific issues that affect their daily life such as the environment, climate change and health.
We provide all the tools to bring science to life, contextualising learning through illustrated articles and worksheets. Our materials allow you to quickly engage children with important issues that affect their daily life such as the environment, climate change and health. Our resources are developed to boost scientific literacy, increase science vocabulary and promote independent learning.
Gene Editing
Very soon, some of the food you eat may be made using gene-edited (GE) crops. These are crops whose genes have been changed by scientists to make them more nutritious or resistant to diseases. Some people think this is a good idea, while others are against it. After reading this article you will be ready to make up your own mind.
First of all – what exactly is a gene?
You are a very special person – there is nobody else quite like you.The secret to what makes you unique is a chemical called DNA, which is found locked up in every cell in your body.
For more FREE Phosphor resources to engage your students in current scientific issues go to: phosphorescience.com
Quickly engage your children with important scientific issues that affect their daily life such as the environment, climate change and health.
We provide all the tools to bring science to life, contextualising learning through illustrated articles and worksheets. Our materials allow you to quickly engage children with important issues that affect their daily life such as the environment, climate change and health. Our resources are developed to boost scientific literacy, increase science vocabulary and promote independent learning.
Dino Discovery
Even though dinosaurs lived millions of years before humans existed, we know a lot about what they looked like from studying fossils.
Back in 2006 Robyn and Stuart Mackenzie were riding their motorbikes on their farm in the Australian outback when they spotted a pile of what looked like large black rocks.They took a closer look and decided that they looked a bit like bones. Scientists were called in to take an even closer look and they worked out that they were in fact fossils of dinosaur bones.
For more FREE Phosphor resources to engage your students in current scientific issues go to: phosphorescience.com
Quickly engage your children with important scientific issues that affect their daily life such as the environment, climate change and health.
We provide all the tools to bring science to life, contextualising learning through illustrated articles and worksheets. Our materials allow you to quickly engage children with important issues that affect their daily life such as the environment, climate change and health. Our resources are developed to boost scientific literacy, increase science vocabulary and promote independent learning.
Getting back to nature
Some people are calling for animals that are now extinct in Britain to be reintroduced. But others are not so keen…
Can you think of some animals that live in forests in Britain? You might think of deer, badgers, owls, mice and foxes.
But did you know that only a few hundred years ago Britain was home to lots of other animals like wolves, lynx, bison and even bears?
For more FREE Phosphor resources to engage your students in current scientific issues go to: phosphorescience.com
Quickly engage your children with important scientific issues that affect their daily life such as the environment, climate change and health.
We provide all the tools to bring science to life, contextualising learning through illustrated articles and worksheets. Our materials allow you to quickly engage children with important issues that affect their daily life such as the environment, climate change and health. Our resources are developed to boost scientific literacy, increase science vocabulary and promote independent learning.
Journey to the asteroids
Let us take a journey back in time to billions of years ago. The Solar System as we know it does not exist – there is no Sun, no planets and no moons, just a cloud of gas and dust swirling through the darkness of space. How did this become the Solar System we know today?
Scientists have different ideas about how the Solar System formed – we are not sure exactly what happened because nobody was there to see it. Ideas that are supported by data or observations (evidence) are called hypotheses.
For more FREE Phosphor resources to engage your students in current scientific issues go to: phosphorescience.com
Quickly engage your children with important scientific issues that affect their daily life such as the environment, climate change and health.
We provide all the tools to bring science to life, contextualising learning through illustrated articles and worksheets. Our materials allow you to quickly engage children with important issues that affect their daily life such as the environment, climate change and health. Our resources are developed to boost scientific literacy, increase science vocabulary and promote independent learning.
Heart Helpers
Your heart is a vital organ. It keeps your blood moving around your body. Engineers have designed robots that can help our hearts, keeping them working if they suddenly stop to mending them if they become damaged.
Will, 15 years old, ran onto the rugby pitch for what he thought would be another normal PE lesson.After a disappointing start to the match, things were looking up when Will scored an amazing try. But, within seconds of celebrating Will collapsed on the pitch in front of his shocked teammates.
For more FREE Phosphor resources to engage your students in current scientific issues go to: phosphorescience.com
Quickly engage your children with important scientific issues that affect their daily life such as the environment, climate change and health.
We provide all the tools to bring science to life, contextualising learning through illustrated articles and worksheets. Our materials allow you to quickly engage children with important issues that affect their daily life such as the environment, climate change and health. Our resources are developed to boost scientific literacy, increase science vocabulary and promote independent learning.
Robot Explorers
Dark caves, frozen lakes and the deepest parts of the ocean – there are many places on Earth that are just too dangerous for people to visit. So, engineers across the world are designing robots that can go in our place. Let’s find out about some of them.
Engineers are scientists that design objects to solve problems. Every object that you use for a specific job has been designed by an engineer from the roads you walk on to the pen you use to write with.
Robots are machines designed by engineers to do jobs that are too dangerous, dirty or boring to be done by humans. Engineers are designing robots that are able to explore dangerous places on Earth.
For more FREE Phosphor resources to engage your students in current scientific issues go to: phosphorescience.com
Quickly engage your children with important scientific issues that affect their daily life such as the environment, climate change and health.
We provide all the tools to bring science to life, contextualising learning through illustrated articles and worksheets. Our materials allow you to quickly engage children with important issues that affect their daily life such as the environment, climate change and health. Our resources are developed to boost scientific literacy, increase science vocabulary and promote independent learning.
COVID-19
The world shut down while COVID-19 spread rapidly throughout human populations in many countries during 2020. A tiny virus caused havoc with lives and caused many deaths.
In early 2020 a mystery illness was making many people very ill in China and causing people to die. Doctors realised quite early on that this flu-like illness was actually a respiratory disease.The virus caused breathing problems and it was very similar to other viruses which had emerged a few years before called SARS and MERS.
For more FREE Phosphor resources to engage your students in current scientific issues go to: phosphorescience.com
Quickly engage your children with important scientific issues that affect their daily life such as the environment, climate change and health.
We provide all the tools to bring science to life, contextualising learning through illustrated articles and worksheets. Our materials allow you to quickly engage children with important issues that affect their daily life such as the environment, climate change and health. Our resources are developed to boost scientific literacy, increase science vocabulary and promote independent learning.
Return to the moon
The last time a person walked on the Moon was in 1972, but there are plans to return there very soon. Engineers are building a brand new rocket for this new mission.
The new NASA mission to return people – including the first woman and person of colour - to the Moon’s surface in 2024 is called Artemis. This name has been chosen for a reason. In Ancient Greek mythology, Artemis is a Goddess – twin sister to the God Apollo. And Apollo was the name of the NASA mission that took people to the Moon for the first time.
For more FREE Phosphor resources to engage your students in current scientific issues go to: phosphorescience.com
Quickly engage your children with important scientific
issues that affect their daily life such as the environment, climate change and health.
We provide all the tools to bring science to life, contextualising learning through illustrated articles and worksheets. Our materials allow you to quickly engage children with important issues that affect their daily life such as the environment, climate change and health. Our resources are developed to boost scientific literacy, increase science vocabulary and promote independent learning.
Plastic not so fantastic
Plastic is a really useful material – it can be moulded into lots of different shapes, it’s waterproof and durable. Plastic might look like a wonder material, but there is a problem.
It’s thought that more than eight million tonnes of plastic enter the world’s oceans every year. That is about the same mass as 2 million elephants – it’s very difficult to imagine just how much plastic this is – but it’s a lot!
For more FREE resources to engage your students in current scientific issues click here
‘Global Warming’ is a science resource which contains 5 pages of information about global warming, as well as 1 worksheet resource, for the children to research global warming in more detail.
The resource encourages children to think more about why thinking about global warming is important and action needs to be taken now.
This global warming resource will also be available as part of a bundle of high quality and current/topical science resources aimed at high ability 10 to 13 year olds. They are designed to support and extend scientific literacy and help them to understand topical science which surrounds everyday life. The global warming resource will allow your more able students to be extended further and challenged to work more independently on a current science issue.
For more FREE resources to engage your students in current scientific issues click here
‘Vaccines’ is a science resource which contains 3 pages of information about vaccines in general and more specifically vaccines which have been developed to prevent COVID-19, as well as 1 worksheet resource, for the children to research COVID-19 vaccines in more detail.
The resource encourages children to think more about why vaccines are important, especially for coming out of the pandemic situation we are in now.
This vaccines resource will also be available as part of a bundle of high quality and current/topical science resources aimed at high ability 10 to 13 year olds. They are designed to support and extend scientific literacy and help them to understand topical science which surrounds everyday life. The vaccine resource will allow your more able students to be extended further and challenged to work more independently on a current science issue.
For more FREE resources to engage your students in current scientific issues click here
An infographic about the climate change emergency which is happening and the importance of tackling climate change now for the sake of all of humanity.
Humans are releasing greenhouse gases into the atmosphere which are causing global temperatures to rise, which is causing a huge risk to human life on Earth in the future.
For more FREE resources to engage your students in current scientific issues click here
An infographic about climate change and the importance of feedback loops which are accelerating the rise in global temperatures. Global warming is a man-made problem mostly caused by the burning fossils fuels which releases large amounts of the greenhouse gas carbon dioxide into the atmosphere.
However, carbon emissions from human activities are just half the story. The Earth’s own systems are raising the global temperatures even higher and these are called ‘feedback loops’. They include systems such as: forests, the atmosphere, permafrost and the albedo effect.
For more FREE resources to engage your students in current scientific issues click here
Here is a set of 3 FREE science posters which are connected with space, including the Big Bang, the sun and the moon. These high quality and informative resources can be printed and displayed in a science laboratory or classroom.
You could take advantage of this massive bundle of 40+ science fact sheets and worksheet resources, for virtually nothing…
Check out: https://www.tes.com/teaching-resource/40-science-worksheets-12128604
This comprehensive resource covers a wide range of different and topical science topics, which are aimed at 10 to 14 year olds.