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
A complete, and ready to deliver KS4 lesson
There is nothing for you to do but give it a quick look through and familiarise yourself with it.
Objectives / students learn to:
* Describe what is happening during the fission of uranium-235.
* Describe U-235’s fission products.
* Explain how a chain reaction works.
* Understand how a chain reaction can be controlled.
* Understand the different roles of control rods and moderators
* Understand the difference between fission and fusion.
This lesson majors on fission and chain reactions and their control (and briefly mentions fusion) and it contains the following activities:
Starter - picture puzzle to get the students thinking.
Starter (more) - game / quiz.
SPaG / literacy based on fission.
Video links (very carefully chosen and 3 in total).
Differentiated work sheets - 3 different levels of difficulty.
Gap fills.
Animations (2 different animations):
A single Fission reaction.
Fission chain reactions.
Kinaesthetic activity - get your students up and moving about.
Gap fill (on a different area of this subject).
Plenary quiz game.
All answers to all activities are provided.
Please note: when searching for resources please type barclayfox into the search box/engine and it will show you all my resources.
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. Half life, radioactivity and decay.
6. Activity and half life practicals
7. Dangers and precautions
8. Nuclear radiation in medicine (uses in medicine)
9 -14 Please see this powerpoint for the full list.
Thank you, and happy teaching!
Yours,
Barclayfox.
Updated and improved on 29th November 2016 and then again on 22nd August 2017.
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 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 for you to do but give it a quick look through and familiarise yourself with it.
Lesson objectives:
* Explain how “ions” are formed.
* Understand the properties of alpha, beta and gamma radiation.
* Compare alpha, beta and gamma in terms of their abilities to penetrate and ionise.
The lesson contains:
Notes to help the teacher.
Starter task - unscramble the words race.
Recall Quiz questions with answers.
Card Sort activity - with answers.
Definitions (scientific literacy) activity.
Questions throughout – all answers are provided.
Theory slides (minimal and interactive – not ‘death by powerpoint’).
Gap fills.
Group work - excellent Kinaesthetic activity with questioning – to cement learning and provide some fun.
Video clip link (carefully selected – this alone can save you a lot of time).
Gap fill activity (table of properties) – all answers are provided
Plenary activity / quiz
Student self-assessment versus objectives activity – so learners can judge for themselves how much they have learnt.
Homework.
Equipment list - to give to your technicians.
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 my resources.
I hope you will purchase this excellent lesson and please leave positive feedback.
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. This Lesson.
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).
10-14 See list in this powerpoint
Thank you for your time and happy teaching !
Yours,
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 and resourcing this lesson – I have already spent those hours preparing this lesson for you.
There is nothing to do – if you don’t have time to have a quick look through it in advance the PPT will guide you smoothly through the whole lesson !
Lesson objectives:
* Understand key terms e.g. sterilisation, diagnosis, treatment, tracer, gamma camera, radiotherapy etc.
* Explain how and why radiation is used in sterilisation, and medical diagnosis, and treatment.
* Be able to explain radiotherapy in detail.
This carefully crafted lesson is over 40 slides long, and is full of learning activities as below:
* Notes to help the teacher.
* Starter - simple task where students self-assess themselves against each objective.
* Matching task – answers are provided.
* Paired work activities – answers are provided.
* Scientific literacy activity
* Homework, you choose whether your learners need to do it (if a worksheet answers are provided).
* 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 10 to 20 minutes of searching).
* Gap fill activity - all answers are provided.
* Sequencing activity.
* Up and about 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.
If you like this lesson please leave a 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. Half life, radioactivity and decay.
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.
11-14 Please see list in this powerpoint
Link to the bundle - 50% discount!
https://www.tes.com/teaching-resource/aqa-gcse-new-spec-atomic-structure-mega-pack-bundle-11795491
Thank you, and happy teaching !
Yours,
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.
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 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. This is an excellent lesson.
There is nothing for you to do but give it a quick look through and familiarise yourself with it.
LOs:
* I understand what conservation of momentum means.
* I can describe the difference between an elastic collision and an inelastic collision.
* I can carry out calculations for collisions between objects.
* I can carry out calculations for explosions.
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 - short test.
* Starter - simple task where students self-assess against the objectives.
* Matching task - answers are provided.
* Activity sheet - built into the powerpoint simply print this slide for each student. Answers are provided too.
* Quiz with answers.
* Questions – all answers are provided.
* Peer marking AND self marking.
* Up and about activity
* 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 T/P/S – answers are provided.
* Scientific literacy activity.
* 2 x Demos
* 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. 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.
A complete and ready to deliver high quality KS4 / GCSE lesson from Barclayfox. Updated 20th October 2017.
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 tried and tested, you will not find better.
There is nothing for you to do but give it a quick look through and familiarise yourself with it.
Lesson objectives - I can:
*Describe the structure of the atom (Protons, neutrons, electrons: charges, masses and locations).
* Explain the history of our model of the atom (billiard ball model, plum pudding model, nuclear model, planetary model, quantum mechanical model).
* Describe Rutherford’s experiment which led to the discovery of the nucleus
This carefully crafted lesson is over 40 slides long, has differentiated activity sheets (with answers), and is full of learning activities as below:
* Simple starter - self assess vs objectives
* Matching task - answers are provided.
* Differentiated activity sheets - support, medium ability, high ability.
* Activity sheet - answers.
* 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 links (carefully selected – this alone can save you 20+ minutes of searching).
* Paired work activities – answers are provided.
* Homework worksheet
* Scientific literacy activities.
* Plenary formative / summative assessment quiz / activity.
* Student self-assessment versus objectives activity – learners 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 friends and 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. Atoms, history of the atom and discovery of the nucleus. THIS LESSON.
2. Isotopes and Mass number and Atomic number.
3. Alpha, Beta and Gamma – ionising radiation.
4. Changes in the nucleus – decay equations
5 to 14 Please read the list in the powerpoint.
Happy teaching !
Yours, Barclayfox.
A complete, and ready to deliver, high quality KS3 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. This is a very high quality lesson.
There is nothing for you to do but give it a quick look through and familiarise yourself with it.
Lesson objectives:
* Accurately define “species” and other key terms.
* Give examples of variations within humans.
* Describe variations as continuous and discontinuous.
* Be able to define whether a variation is continuous or discontinuous.
* Conduct an experiment to investigate variation.
This carefully crafted lesson is over 35 slides long, and is full of learning activities as below:
* Notes to help the teacher.
* Starter - Picture meaning and unscramble the key word.
* Starter - simple task where students self-assess against the objectives.
* Activity sheet (unique) - simply print this for each student.
* Practical / student experiment.
* Gap fill activities - all answers are provided.
* Questions – all answers are provided.
* Peer marking & Self marking opportunities.
* Up and about activity
* Theory slides (carefully sculpted, interspaced with learning activities, not ‘death by powerpoint’).
* Play ball opportunities
* Paired work activities – all answers are provided.
* Scientific Literacy activity.
* SMSC
* Plenary formative/summative assessment quiz / activity.
* Student self-assessment versus objectives activity – so learners can judge for themselves how much they have learnt.
* Extension activity – just in case additional activities are required.
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. Bundles – contain 3 or more of these lessons at a discounted price (however please note not all my series are bundled).
1. Variation
2. Adaptation
3. Effects of the environment (environmental variation).
4. Effects on the environment (organisms effects on the environment).
5. Transfers in food chains
Thank you, and happy teaching!
Yours,
Barclayfox.
A complete, KS4 / GCSE lesson (
* Explain the difference between scalars and vectors.
* Name all the important scalars and vectors.
* Successfully complete a practical experiment on vectors/scalars.
* Successfully calculate speed, velocity, distance and time using the speed equation.
This carefully crafted lesson is over 40 slides long, and is full of learning activities as below:
* Notes to help the teacher.
* Starter - unscramble the words.
* Starter - simple task where students self-assess against the objectives.
* Activity sheet (unique - not available anywhere else) - simply print for each student.
* Practical / student experiment.
* Questions (with differentiation) – all answers are provided.
* Peer marking
* Self marking
* Theory slides (carefully sculpted, interspaced with learning activities, not ‘death by powerpoint’).
* Play ball.
* Paired work activities – all answers are provided.
* Homework worksheet (unique)
* Scientific Numeracy activities.
* 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. 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 to 12 - please see list in this powerpoint
Here is the next lesson in the series:
https://www.tes.com/teaching-resource/forces-between-objects-contact-and-non-contact-forces-and-force-fields-complete-lesson-11728381
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.
A complete, and ready to deliver, high quality KS3 lesson from Barclayfox.
(For USA - this lesson is for use between 6th to 8th grade).
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. This is a very high quality lesson.
There is nothing for you to do but give it a quick look through and familiarise yourself with it.
Lesson objectives:
* Represent food chains using Pyramids of numbers.
* Describe how energy is lost as it transfers down the food chain.
* Calculate biomass and create pyramids of biomass.
* Explain bioaccumulation of pesticides and the effect.
This carefully crafted lesson is over 30 slides long, and is full of these learning activities:
* Notes to help the teacher.
* Starter - complete the food web.
* Starter - simple task where students self-assess against the objectives.
* Matching game - answers are provided.
* Role play - spread of pesticides up the food chain.
* Questions – all answers are provided.
* Peer marking & Self marking opportunities
* Up and about activity - role play
* Theory slides (carefully sculpted, interspaced with learning activities, not ‘death by powerpoint’).
* Activity sheet - with answers - simply print it off for each student if required.
* Play ball opportunities
* Video clip links - several (carefully selected – this alone can save you 20+ minutes of searching).
* Paired work activities – all answers are provided.
* Homework - optional / at your discretion using the activity sheet.
* Scientific Literacy activity.
* Scientific Numeracy activity
* SMSC opportunity - use of pesticides & effect on organisms.
* 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.
As teachers we all work ridiculously long hours each week. Give yourself a break, spend some life with your friends and 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 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. Bundles – contain all of these lessons at a discounted price.
1. Variation
2 to 6 - please see inside the powerpoint for the list
Thank you, and happy teaching!
Yours,
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.
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 complete, and ready to deliver, KS4 lesson
For USA - this lesson is for use during 8th to 10th grade.
This is a complete and ready to use 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 many hours creating this great lesson. Furthermore it has been improved time and again after each use – it is a tried and tested lesson of very high quality.
STUDENTS WILL LEARN TO:
* Understand how the extension of a spring changes as you change the force applied.
* Understand what is meant by elastic limit
* Explain Hooke’s law.
* Successfully calculate force, extension and the spring constant.
* Calculate spring constant for springs in series and in parallel.
ACTIVITIES IN THIS LESSON INCLUDE:
* Starter - simple task where students self-assess against the objectives.
* Differentiated (and unique) Activity Sheets - with answers.
* Gap fill activity - all answers are provided.
* Questions – all answers are provided.
* Differentiated questions – all answers are provided.
* Peer 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 10+ minutes of searching).
* Paired work activities – all answers are provided.
* Homework
* Scientific Literacy
* Numeracy activities.
* Plenary formative/summative via worksheet.
* 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.
* Over 35 slides long.
* Includes notes to help the teacher.
Happy teaching!
Barclayfox.
KS3 Energy and conservation of energy - complete lesson, ready to use, pick up and go.
This KS3 lesson teaches energy stores in the new way required for GCSE 9-1 spec - so it builds the correct foundation for KS4. This supports good student progress and avoids confusing them by teaching them the old ideas about energy at KS3 (e.g. light is an energy store, sound is energy etc) and then the new ones at GCSE (9-1 specification).
By the end of the lesson learners will
(ALL) Understand what energy is.
(ALL) Know the unit of energy.
(ALL) Be able to name the 8 energy stores (as per new 9-1 GCSE requirements)
(MOST) Understand what each store is and identify them in the world around them.
(MOST) Explain that energy transfers from one store to another
(SOME) Demonstrate an understanding of the law of conservation of energy.
What do you get?
Complete and ready to use lesson that includes:
Energy cross word worksheet - with ANSWERS.
Energy circus activity sheet - with ANSWERS.
Two carefully chosen videos
Powerpoint that navigates you and the learners throughout and includes questions, answers, peer marking, self marking, video links, plenary quiz with answers etc.
Helpsheet
Equipment list for the circus practical (simply give it to your technicians)
Why buy this?
Very high quality (over 15 hours to create).
Optimised - low teacher effort for great student results.
Tried and tested (taught to my classes in 2017 and again in 2018).
Differentiated.
Complete and ready to deliver.
Easy to use
Simple and clear.
Engaging and varied.
Unique.
Correct to the new 9-1 GCSE spec. Beware! Most KS3 lessons on tes are not correct, they are contradicting the new 9-1 GCSE spec.
Get a free lesson!
Purchase this resource, leave a fair review and choose another Barclayfox resource (to the same value as this one) for free! Instruction about how to claim are included as part of the download.
Happy teaching!
Barclayfox.
There are lots more great time saving lessons in my tes shop:
barclayfox shop
Search words:
KS3 energy, energy stores, new specification, new spec., new science spec, new science specification, new physics spec, 9-1, 9 – 1, GCSE, AQA, Edexcel, OCR, WJEC, IOP, energy, energy stores, energy types, not energy resources, joules, Joules, conservation of energy.
Great fun Christmas activities, complete and ready to use! Lots of engaging, enjoyable and fun activities and a primary activity of building and firing straw air powered rockets in the classroom (no need to go outside). Please don’t stop reading! This is not a lesson only for science teachers… easy and fully scaffolded, you do NOT need any rocket building skills! But you will have fun too!
The Story:
A story is woven and as part of the lesson the learners build rockets to save Christmas from Safcut - who is Santa’s evil brother. All instructions are included and the lesson teaches the learners almost automatically, this is NOT a lesson only for our friends the science teachers (although it’s excellent for them too!) - any of us can use this fun and imaginative lesson. Who is Safcut? What’s his plan? Can your class save Christmas?
Length:
The length of the lesson is very flexible, there are activities you can miss out and on the other hand there is a Christmas cracker based extension. So, the lesson can easily last anywhere between 1/2 hour and 1 and a 1/2 hours depending on your needs.
Better than a boring quiz:
This is definitely not a Christmas quiz, it gets the learners out of their seats, keeps them focused and engaged as they work in teams building and creating. It’s a great lesson you can use with all ages from 6 to 16 and it won’t go out of date so you can use it for years to come, which makes it excellent value at this price !
What do they learn?
As well as being great fun and entertaining it is also educational and it includes: literacy, SMSC, team working skills, cooperation, physical building skills, questions with answers, activities with answers, play ball game, what engineers do, identify parts of a rocket, joke telling etc
High quality lesson, great for teachers of any subject!
Merry Christmas !
Happy teaching !
Barclayfox.
Key words:
Christmas: activities, Christmas activity, Xmas, saving Christmas, Santa’s evil brother, quiz, Xmas. Practical, team work, fun, entertaining, engaging, SMSC, literacy, happy kids, fun learning, rockets, air power, pressure, balloons, elf, elves, sleigh, reindeer, Christmas maths, Christmas English, Christmas PE, Christmas History, Christmas Geography, Christmas PSHE, Christmas RE, Christmas French, Christmas German, MFL, Christmas Sociology, Christmas Psychology, Christmas Physics, Christmas Chemistry, Christmas Biology, Christmas Design technology, Christmas product design, Christmas engineering, drama, ICT, media, computer science, art, business, EBacc, BTec, Progress 8.
This is a very entertaining, complete and ready to use.
A Christmas lesson full of fun activities.
It includes a fully scaffolded activity where students build and fire simple air driven rockets made from straws.
This is done in the classroom - no need to go outside.
You do NOT need to know how to build the rocket! the lesson carefully guides students so they can do it with or without guidance from you !!!
Christmas in jeopardy:
A story of this Christmas being in jeopardy is told, and the learners have to try to save Christmas from the evil plan of Safcut (Santa’s brother). All instructions are included and the lesson teaches the learners almost automatically, any teacher regardless of their subject can use this fun and imaginative lesson. Who is Safcut? What is his plan to ruin Christmas? Can your class save Christmas?
The length of the lesson ?
is very flexible depending on your needs. There are activities you can miss out and there is also a Christmas cracker based extension you can add in. So, the lesson can easily last anywhere between 0.5 hours and 1.5 hours depending on your requirements.
Which teachers can use this (subjects / ages) ?
his lesson gets the learners out of their seats, keeps them happy, focused and engaged as they work in teams building and creating. It’s a great lesson teachers of any subject can use with all ages from 6 to 16 and it won’t go out of date so you can use it for years to come, which makes it excellent value at this price !
Skills learnt ?
As well as being great fun and entertaining it is also educational and includes: literacy, SMSC, team working skills, humour, questions with answers, cooperation, activities with answers, play ball game, identify the parts, joke telling etc
High quality, ready to use lesson - great for teachers of all subjects!
Happy teaching !
Barclayfox.
Key words:
Christmas Geography, Christmas Geog, Christmas History, Christmas French, Christmas activities, Christmas activity, Xmas, saving Christmas, Santa’s evil brother, quiz, Xmas. Practical, team work, fun, entertaining, engaging, SMSC, literacy, happy kids, fun learning, rockets, air power, pressure, balloons, elf, elves, sleigh, reindeer, Christmas Maths, Christmas English, Christmas PE, Christmas PSHE, Christmas RE, Christmas French, Christmas German, MFL, Christmas Sociology, Christmas Psychology, Christmas Physics, Christmas Chemistry, Christmas Biology, Christmas Design technology, Christmas product design, Christmas engineering, drama, ICT, media, computer science, art, business, EBacc, BTec, Progress 8.
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.
Complete and ready to use lesson covering: Skeleton + Joints + Muscles
This is a KS3 lesson, in this lessons students learn among other things:
To describe the functions of the skeleton and the role of joints.
To name bones and understand where within the skeleton specific bones are located.
To understand the different types of joints.
To investigate and also explain antagonistic muscle pairs.
Activities for students include:
3 short starters based on picture for thinking, SPaG/literacy and thinking about what the skeleton is for (use 1 or all as you see fit).
Differentiated activity sheets.
All answers are provided throughout.
Gap fills.
Video.
Animated game - via a link to an excellent site that is well worth finding !
Questioning (all answers provided).
Label the skeleton activity sheet (diagrams and answers are included in this download).
Joints gap fill.
Practical experiment.
Plenary quiz.
Further information:
This lesson covers 3 topics, skeleton and joints and muscles. Consequently it covers all the important points but is not as detailed as spending 1 full hour lesson on each of these 3 topics (3 hours total). This lesson is very useful, even more so if you want to get ahead and build a buffer to allow for a revision lesson before the test or end of year exams, or if you have fallen behind were you should be in comparison to your teaching rota, or in case students find things more difficult later. If you need deep detail and to spend a total of 3 hours on these three topics then you could easily add some of your own content to this powerpoint.
Happy teaching !
Barclayfox.
key words
skeleton, muscles, joints, muscle, joint, bones, skeleton, antagonistic muscles, antagonistic pairs, femur, clavicle, rib cage, ks3, yewar 7, year 7, y7, Y7, pelvis, skeleton, musckle, joints, the skeleton, muscles and the skeleton, skeleton worksheet, skeleton activity, skeleton and joints, skeleton joints, human body, human skeleton, KS3, year 7, function of the skeleton, joints and teh skeleton, function of the skeleton, human skeleton.
A complete, and ready to deliver, KS4 lesson.
(For USA - this lesson is at 8th to 10th grade level).
There is nothing for you to do but give it a quick look through and familiarise yourself with it.
Lesson outomes:
* I can name forces and identify the direction they act in (KS3 revision).
* I understand Newton’s 3rd law.
* I can analyse situations using N3L
This carefully crafted lesson is over 30 slides long, and is full of learning activities as below:
* Notes to help the teacher.
* Starter - simple task where students self-assess against the objectives.
* Activity sheet - unique to Barclayfox.
* Activity sheet answers.
* Questions – all answers are provided.
* Self marking / Peer marking
* Theory slides (carefully sculpted, interspaced with learning activities, not ‘death by powerpoint’).
* Play ball.
* Quiz Quiz Trade game.
* Video clip link (carefully selected – this alone can save you 20+ minutes of searching).
* Paired work activities – all answers are provided.
* Student self-assessment versus objectives activity – so learners can judge for themselves how much they have learnt.
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.
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.