Hero image

Eleanor-crook's Shop

Average Rating4.71
(based on 7 reviews)

I am a secondary science teacher from Plymouth, United Kingdom. I have a passion for designing interactive, engaging and well scaffolded resources that are inclusive for all pupils. I teach all years, from years 7-13. I teach KS3 Activate (Biology, Chemistry and Physics), AQA GCSE Combined Science Trilogy (Biology and Chemistry), AQA GCSE Biology, AQA GCSE Chemistry, and A Level Biology (OCR A).

216Uploads

18k+Views

2k+Downloads

I am a secondary science teacher from Plymouth, United Kingdom. I have a passion for designing interactive, engaging and well scaffolded resources that are inclusive for all pupils. I teach all years, from years 7-13. I teach KS3 Activate (Biology, Chemistry and Physics), AQA GCSE Combined Science Trilogy (Biology and Chemistry), AQA GCSE Biology, AQA GCSE Chemistry, and A Level Biology (OCR A).
The Solar System - KS3 Activate lesson
eleanor-crookeleanor-crook

The Solar System - KS3 Activate lesson

(0)
A full 1 hour lesson designed for a mixed ability year 7 class. This is the 2nd lesson in “Chapter 4 - Space” from Activate 1, Physics. This lesson is on ‘the solar system’. This lesson should be suitable to teach to any KS3 Physics class, even by those where physics is not their specialism. This lesson (and all lessons in this unit) is designed to be interactive and engaging, with plenty of real world examples and independent tasks. From this lesson, students should be able to: Identify and compare the inner planets / terrestrial planets, and outer planets / gas giants To recall that our planets orbit the Sun in an elliptical shape Compare the sizes and surface temperatures of the planets in our Solar System Briefly describe how the Solar System was formed All of my lesson resources contain: A 5-in-5 retrieval-style starter An interesting lesson hook, careers link, or retrieval practice to start the lesson Teacher input slides with dual coding and reduced cognitive load Teacher models Regular ‘check for understanding’ slides, such as hand signals quizzes Regular student independent practice slides, with optional scaffolds, challenges and answer slides A plenary task
The night sky - KS3 Activate lesson
eleanor-crookeleanor-crook

The night sky - KS3 Activate lesson

(0)
A full 1 hour lesson designed for a mixed ability year 7 class. This is the 1st lesson in “Chapter 4 - Space” from Activate 1, Physics. This lesson is on ‘the night sky’. This lesson should be suitable to teach to any KS3 Physics class, even by those where physics is not their specialism. This lesson (and all lessons in this unit) is designed to be interactive and engaging, with plenty of real world examples and independent tasks. From this lesson, students should be able to: Describe the objects you can see in the night sky Define the terms satellite, meteor, comet, Solar System, galaxy and Universe Describe the structure of the Universe Compare the sizes of structures in the Universe All of my lesson resources contain: A 5-in-5 retrieval-style starter An interesting lesson hook, careers link, or retrieval practice to start the lesson Teacher input slides with dual coding and reduced cognitive load Teacher models Regular ‘check for understanding’ slides, such as hand signals quizzes Regular student independent practice slides, with optional scaffolds, challenges and answer slides A plenary task
The Earth - KS3 Activate lesson
eleanor-crookeleanor-crook

The Earth - KS3 Activate lesson

(0)
A full 1 hour lesson designed for a mixed ability year 7 class. This is the 3rd lesson in “Chapter 4 - Space” from Activate 1, Physics. This lesson is on ‘the Earth’. This lesson should be suitable to teach to any KS3 Physics class, even by those where physics is not their specialism. This lesson (and all lessons in this unit) is designed to be interactive and engaging, with plenty of real world examples and independent tasks. From this lesson, students should be able to: Explain what causes day and night Explain why the Sun appears to rise in the East and set in the West Describe the seasonal changes in different places on Earth Explain what causes seasons All of my lesson resources contain: A 5-in-5 retrieval-style starter An interesting lesson hook, careers link, or retrieval practice to start the lesson Teacher input slides with dual coding and reduced cognitive load Teacher models Regular ‘check for understanding’ slides, such as hand signals quizzes Regular student independent practice slides, with optional scaffolds, challenges and answer slides A plenary task
Light - KS3 Activate lesson
eleanor-crookeleanor-crook

Light - KS3 Activate lesson

(0)
A full 1 hour lesson designed for a mixed ability year 7 class. This is the 1st lesson in “Chapter 3 - Light” from Activate 1, Physics. This lesson is on ‘light’. This lesson should be suitable to teach to any KS3 Physics class, even by those where physics is not their specialism. This lesson (and all lessons in this unit) is designed to be interactive and engaging, with plenty of real world examples and independent tasks. From this lesson, students should be able to: Use ray diagrams to explain how we see non-luminous objects Explain the terms transparent, translucent and opaque, and give examples Explain the terms luminous and non-luminous, and give examples Explain that light-time (light-minutes and light-years) is a measure of distance All of my lesson resources contain: A 5-in-5 retrieval-style starter An interesting lesson hook, careers link, or retrieval practice to start the lesson Teacher input slides with dual coding and reduced cognitive load Teacher models Regular ‘check for understanding’ slides, such as hand signals quizzes Regular student independent practice slides, with optional scaffolds, challenges and answer slides A plenary task
Gas pressure - KS3 Activate lesson
eleanor-crookeleanor-crook

Gas pressure - KS3 Activate lesson

(0)
A full 1 hour lesson designed for a mixed ability year 8 class. This is the 3rd lesson in “Chapter 3 - Motion and Pressure” from Activate 2, Physics. This lesson is on ‘gas pressure’. This lesson should be suitable to teach to any KS3 Physics class, even by those where physics is not their specialism. This lesson (and all lessons in this unit) is designed to be interactive and engaging, with plenty of real world examples and independent tasks. This lesson contains a number of practical demonstrations. From this lesson, students should be able to: Define the term ‘gas pressure’ Explain what causes gas pressure Describe how volume and temperature affect gas pressure Explain why volume and temperature affect gas pressure Describe how atmospheric pressure changes with increasing altitude Explain why atmospheric pressure changes with increasing altitude All of my lesson resources contain: A 5-in-5 retrieval-style starter An interesting lesson hook, careers link, or retrieval practice to start the lesson Teacher input slides with dual coding and reduced cognitive load Teacher models Regular ‘check for understanding’ slides, such as hand signals quizzes Regular student independent practice slides, with optional scaffolds, challenges and answer slides A plenary task
Speed - KS3 Activate lesson
eleanor-crookeleanor-crook

Speed - KS3 Activate lesson

(0)
A full 1 hour lesson designed for a mixed ability year 8 class. This is the 1st lesson in “Chapter 3 - Motion and Pressure” from Activate 2, Physics. This lesson is on ‘speed’. This lesson should be suitable to teach to any KS3 Physics class, even by those where physics is not their specialism. This lesson (and all lessons in this unit) is designed to be interactive and engaging, with plenty of real world examples and independent tasks. From this lesson, students should be able to: Give a scientific definition for the term ‘speed’ Identify units of speed Recall typical speeds for a range of methods of travel in m/s Use the formula distance / time to calculate speed Describe the difference between average speed and instantaneous speed Describe relative motion All of my lesson resources contain: A 5-in-5 retrieval-style starter An interesting lesson hook, careers link, or retrieval practice to start the lesson Teacher input slides with dual coding and reduced cognitive load Teacher models Regular ‘check for understanding’ slides, such as hand signals quizzes Regular student independent practice slides, with optional scaffolds, challenges and answer slides A plenary task
Motion graphs - KS3 Activate lesson
eleanor-crookeleanor-crook

Motion graphs - KS3 Activate lesson

(0)
A full 1 hour lesson designed for a mixed ability year 8 class. This is the 2nd lesson in “Chapter 3 - Motion and Pressure” from Activate 2, Physics. This lesson is on ‘motion graphs’, specifically distance-time graphs. This lesson should be suitable to teach to any KS3 Physics class, even by those where physics is not their specialism. This lesson (and all lessons in this unit) is designed to be interactive and engaging, with plenty of real world examples and independent tasks. From this lesson, students should be able to: Interpret distance-time graphs Describe a journey using a distance-time graph Use distance-time graphs to calculate speed All of my lesson resources contain: A 5-in-5 retrieval-style starter An interesting lesson hook, careers link, or retrieval practice to start the lesson Teacher input slides with dual coding and reduced cognitive load Teacher models Regular ‘check for understanding’ slides, such as hand signals quizzes Regular student independent practice slides, with optional scaffolds, challenges and answer slides A plenary task
The Moon - KS3 Activate lesson
eleanor-crookeleanor-crook

The Moon - KS3 Activate lesson

(0)
A full 1 hour lesson designed for a mixed ability year 7 class. This is the 4th and final lesson in “Chapter 4 - Space” from Activate 1, Physics. This lesson is on ‘the Moon’. This lesson should be suitable to teach to any KS3 Physics class, even by those where physics is not their specialism. This lesson (and all lessons in this unit) is designed to be interactive and engaging, with plenty of real world examples and independent tasks. From this lesson, students should be able to: Describe the phases of the Moon Explain what causes us to see phases of the Moon Describe what happens during a solar eclipse and explain what causes a solar eclipse Describe what happens during a lunar eclipse and explain what causes a lunar eclipse Explain the difference between a lunar eclipse and a full moon, and explain why we don’t see a lunar eclipse every month All of my lesson resources contain: A 5-in-5 retrieval-style starter An interesting lesson hook, careers link, or retrieval practice to start the lesson Teacher input slides with dual coding and reduced cognitive load Teacher models Regular ‘check for understanding’ slides, such as hand signals quizzes Regular student independent practice slides, with optional scaffolds, challenges and answer slides A plenary task
Turning forces - KS3 Activate lesson
eleanor-crookeleanor-crook

Turning forces - KS3 Activate lesson

(0)
A full 1 hour lesson designed for a mixed ability year 8 class. This is the 6th and final lesson in “Chapter 3 - Motion and Pressure” from Activate 2, Physics. This lesson is on ‘turning forces’. This lesson should be suitable to teach to any KS3 Physics class, even by those where physics is not their specialism. This lesson (and all lessons in this unit) is designed to be interactive and engaging, with plenty of real world examples and independent tasks. From this lesson, students should be able to: Recall the definition for a ‘moment’ and use the term ‘moment’ correctly in a sentence Recall the formula for calculating moments Recall the law of moments Explain why levers, e.g. spanners and crowbars, mean a smaller force can have a greater effect Use the formula to calculate moments Apply the law of moments and formula for calculating moments to predict whether a seesaw will be balanced or not All of my lesson resources contain: A 5-in-5 retrieval-style starter An interesting lesson hook, careers link, or retrieval practice to start the lesson Teacher input slides with dual coding and reduced cognitive load Teacher models Regular ‘check for understanding’ slides, such as hand signals quizzes Regular student independent practice slides, with optional scaffolds, challenges and answer slides A plenary task
Space - KS3 Activate FULL TOPIC
eleanor-crookeleanor-crook

Space - KS3 Activate FULL TOPIC

4 Resources
This unit of work contains four 1-hour lesson resources designed for a mixed ability year 7 class. This unit follows "Chapter 4 - Space” from Activate 1, Physics. However, it would be suitable for any KS3 curriculum studying physics. This unit of work is designed to be engaging and interactive, with plenty of practical demonstrations and teacher models. There are a couple of class practicals too which come with risk assessments and full, chunked instructions. The lessons are designed so that they can be delivered by any member of staff, regardless of whether chemistry is their specialism. They are also suitable for students working outside the classroom, e.g. in isolation. The lessons should be delivered in this order: The night sky The Solar System The Earth The Moon All of my lesson resources contain: A 5-in-5 retrieval-style starter An interesting lesson hook, careers link, or retrieval practice to start the lesson Teacher input slides with dual coding and reduced cognitive load Teacher models Regular ‘check for understanding’ slides, such as hand signals quizzes Regular student independent practice slides, with optional scaffolds, challenges and answer slides A plenary task
Pressure in liquids - KS3 Activate lesson
eleanor-crookeleanor-crook

Pressure in liquids - KS3 Activate lesson

(0)
A full 1 hour lesson designed for a mixed ability year 8 class. This is the 4th lesson in “Chapter 3 - Motion and Pressure” from Activate 2, Physics. This lesson is on ‘pressure in liquids’. This lesson should be suitable to teach to any KS3 Physics class, even by those where physics is not their specialism. This lesson (and all lessons in this unit) is designed to be interactive and engaging, with plenty of real world examples and independent tasks. This lesson includes two simple practical demonstrations. From this lesson, students should be able to: Describe how liquids exert pressure in all directions Describe how liquid pressure changes with depth Explain why liquid pressure changes with depth Explain floating and sinking in terms of pressure and upthrust All of my lesson resources contain: A 5-in-5 retrieval-style starter An interesting lesson hook, careers link, or retrieval practice to start the lesson Teacher input slides with dual coding and reduced cognitive load Teacher models Regular ‘check for understanding’ slides, such as hand signals quizzes Regular student independent practice slides, with optional scaffolds, challenges and answer slides A plenary task
Pressure on solids - KS3 Activate lesson
eleanor-crookeleanor-crook

Pressure on solids - KS3 Activate lesson

(0)
A full 1 hour lesson designed for a mixed ability year 8 class. This is the 5th lesson in “Chapter 3 - Motion and Pressure” from Activate 2, Physics. This lesson is on ‘pressure on solids’. This lesson should be suitable to teach to any KS3 Physics class, even by those where physics is not their specialism. This lesson (and all lessons in this unit) is designed to be interactive and engaging, with plenty of real world examples and independent tasks. From this lesson, students should be able to: Recall the definition for pressure in terms of force and area Apply ideas about pressure to different situations, e.g. why snow shoes make it easier to walk in the snow Recall the formula for calculating pressure, with the correct units Calculate the pressure acting on a surface when given the force and area All of my lesson resources contain: A 5-in-5 retrieval-style starter An interesting lesson hook, careers link, or retrieval practice to start the lesson Teacher input slides with dual coding and reduced cognitive load Teacher models Regular ‘check for understanding’ slides, such as hand signals quizzes Regular student independent practice slides, with optional scaffolds, challenges and answer slides A plenary task
Energy and power - KS3 Activate lesson
eleanor-crookeleanor-crook

Energy and power - KS3 Activate lesson

(0)
A full 1 hour lesson designed for a mixed ability year 8 class. This is the 8th and final lesson in “Chapter 2 - Energy” from Activate 2, Physics. This lesson is on ‘energy and power’. This lesson should be suitable to teach to any KS3 Physics class, even by those where physics is not their specialism. This lesson (and all lessons in this unit) is designed to be interactive and engaging, with plenty of real world examples and independent tasks. From this lesson, students should be able to: Define the term ‘power’ Use the unit ‘kilowatt hours’ as a measure of energy Calculate power using the equation energy / time All of my lesson resources contain: A 5-in-5 retrieval-style starter An interesting lesson hook, careers link, or retrieval practice to start the lesson Teacher input slides with dual coding and reduced cognitive load Teacher models Regular ‘check for understanding’ slides, such as hand signals quizzes Regular student independent practice slides, with optional scaffolds, challenges and answer slides A plenary task
Energy transfer, radiation - KS3 Activate lesson
eleanor-crookeleanor-crook

Energy transfer, radiation - KS3 Activate lesson

(0)
A full 1 hour lesson designed for a mixed ability year 8 class. This is the 6th lesson in “Chapter 2 - Energy” from Activate 2, Physics. This lesson is on ‘radiation - energy transfers’. This lesson should be suitable to teach to any KS3 Physics class, even by those where physics is not their specialism. This lesson (and all lessons in this unit) is designed to be interactive and engaging, with plenty of real world examples and independent tasks. From this lesson, students should be able to: Define the term ‘radiation’ Recognise that energy can be transferred through a vacuum by radiation Determine whether energy is being transferred by conduction, convection or radiation from given examples Compare methods of energy transfer by conduction, convection and radiation All of my lesson resources contain: A 5-in-5 retrieval-style starter An interesting lesson hook, careers link, or retrieval practice to start the lesson Teacher input slides with dual coding and reduced cognitive load Teacher models Regular ‘check for understanding’ slides, such as hand signals quizzes Regular student independent practice slides, with optional scaffolds, challenges and answer slides A plenary task
Energy transfer, particles - KS3 Activate lesson
eleanor-crookeleanor-crook

Energy transfer, particles - KS3 Activate lesson

(0)
A full 1 hour lesson designed for a mixed ability year 8 class. This is the 5th lesson in “Chapter 2 - Energy” from Activate 2, Physics. This lesson is on conduction and convection (energy transfer - particles). This lesson should be suitable to teach to any KS3 Physics class, even by those where physics is not their specialism. This lesson (and all lessons in this unit) is designed to be interactive and engaging, with plenty of real world examples and independent tasks. From this lesson, students should be able to: Describe how energy is transferred through solids by conduction Explain why metals are better thermal conductors than non-metals Describe how energy is transferred through fluids by convection Explain what causes a sea breeze All of my lesson resources contain: A 5-in-5 retrieval-style starter An interesting lesson hook, careers link, or retrieval practice to start the lesson Teacher input slides with dual coding and reduced cognitive load Teacher models Regular ‘check for understanding’ slides, such as hand signals quizzes Regular student independent practice slides, with optional scaffolds, challenges and answer slides A plenary task
Energy transfer, forces - KS3 Activate lesson
eleanor-crookeleanor-crook

Energy transfer, forces - KS3 Activate lesson

(0)
A full 1 hour lesson designed for a mixed ability year 8 class. This is the 8th and final lesson in “Chapter 2 - Energy” from Activate 2, Physics. This lesson focuses on work done (titled ‘energy transfer - forces’). This lesson should be suitable to teach to any KS3 Physics class, even by those where physics is not their specialism. This lesson (and all lessons in this unit) is designed to be interactive and engaging, with plenty of real world examples and independent tasks. From this lesson, students should be able to: Give a definition for the key term ‘work’ Identify when work is being done from a range of scenarios To calculate work done using the equation force x distance To explain how simple machines (levers and ramps) allow some forces to have greater effects To explain why a lever is known as a ‘force multiplier’ To apply the law of conservation of energy to simple machines All of my lesson resources contain: A 5-in-5 retrieval-style starter An interesting lesson hook, careers link, or retrieval practice to start the lesson Teacher input slides with dual coding and reduced cognitive load Teacher models Regular ‘check for understanding’ slides, such as hand signals quizzes Regular student independent practice slides, with optional scaffolds, challenges and answer slides A plenary task
Energy resources - KS3 Activate lesson
eleanor-crookeleanor-crook

Energy resources - KS3 Activate lesson

(0)
A full 1 hour lesson designed for a mixed ability year 8 class. This is the 2nd lesson in “Chapter 2 - Energy” from Activate 2, Physics. This lesson is on ‘energy resources’. This lesson should be suitable to teach to any KS3 Physics class, even by those where physics is not their specialism. This lesson (and all lessons in this unit) is designed to be interactive and engaging, with plenty of real world examples and independent tasks. From this lesson, students should be able to: Explain what a non-renewable energy resource is Describe some uses of fossil fuels (coal, oil and natural gas) Describe how fossil fuels (coal, oil and natural gas) are formed Evaluate the use of thermal power plants and nuclear power plants Explain what a renewable energy resource is Give some examples of renewable energy resources All of my lesson resources contain: A 5-in-5 retrieval-style starter An interesting lesson hook, careers link, or retrieval practice to start the lesson Teacher input slides with dual coding and reduced cognitive load Teacher models Regular ‘check for understanding’ slides, such as hand signals quizzes Regular student independent practice slides, with optional scaffolds, challenges and answer slides A plenary task
Energy adds up - KS3 Activate lesson
eleanor-crookeleanor-crook

Energy adds up - KS3 Activate lesson

(0)
A full 1 hour lesson designed for a mixed ability year 8 class. This is the 8th and final lesson in “Chapter 2 - Energy” from Activate 2, Physics. This lesson is on conservation of energy (titled ‘energy adds up’). This lesson should be suitable to teach to any KS3 Physics class, even by those where physics is not their specialism. This lesson (and all lessons in this unit) is designed to be interactive and engaging, with plenty of real world examples and independent tasks. From this lesson, students should be able to: Recall the law of conservation of energy Recall the 7 main stores of energy When given an example, identify what the main store of energy is Describe how energy is transferred between one store to another Explain why money can be used to model energy All of my lesson resources contain: A 5-in-5 retrieval-style starter An interesting lesson hook, careers link, or retrieval practice to start the lesson Teacher input slides with dual coding and reduced cognitive load Teacher models Regular ‘check for understanding’ slides, such as hand signals quizzes Regular student independent practice slides, with optional scaffolds, challenges and answer slides A plenary task
Energy and temperature - KS3 Activate lesson
eleanor-crookeleanor-crook

Energy and temperature - KS3 Activate lesson

(0)
A full 1 hour lesson designed for a mixed ability year 8 class. This is the 4th lesson in “Chapter 2 - Energy” from Activate 2, Physics. This lesson is on ‘energy and temperature’. This lesson should be suitable to teach to any KS3 Physics class, even by those where physics is not their specialism. This lesson (and all lessons in this unit) is designed to be interactive and engaging, with plenty of real world examples and independent tasks. From this lesson, students should be able to: Recall a scientific definition for the term ‘temperature’ in terms of energy Describe the difference between the temperature of an object and its thermal energy store Describe how the arrangement of particles changes when a substance is heated Describe how equilibrium is reached when an object has a different temperature to the surroundings All of my lesson resources contain: A 5-in-5 retrieval-style starter An interesting lesson hook, careers link, or retrieval practice to start the lesson Teacher input slides with dual coding and reduced cognitive load Teacher models Regular ‘check for understanding’ slides, such as hand signals quizzes Regular student independent practice slides, with optional scaffolds, challenges and answer slides A plenary task
KS3 Static electricity lesson
eleanor-crookeleanor-crook

KS3 Static electricity lesson

(0)
This is a full 1 hour lesson resource on static electricity. This was originally designed for a top set year 8 class. This lesson involves practical demonstrations and activities. The following equipment will be needed: A comb and a tap (for demo) Balloons (for demo) Empty can (for demo) Plastic rods, cloth and small pieces of paper (for class practical) The PowerPoint contains: A “5 in 5” retrieval style starter based on the electricity topic, with answers Retrieval practice on the structure of an atom and subatomic particles A practical demo bending water using a comb Direct instruction on static electricity (using comb and water as an example) A hand signals ‘thumbs up’ true or false quiz A practical demo making hair stand up using a balloon A practical demo making an empty can roll using a balloon A guided conservation on why this happens A deliberate practice written task on static electricity, with guided self assessment A class practical on picking up paper using static electricity A deliberate practice written task on this practical, with guided self assessment A plenary task