25 June 2026

New Calculator, Old Habits: Comparing the Casio fx-CG50, fx-CG100, fx-991EX and fx-991CW

 


New Calculator, Old Habits: Comparing the Casio fx-CG50, fx-CG100, fx-991EX and fx-991CW

There are moments in teaching when the most interesting research is not done in a university, a government department, or a glossy product launch.

It happens when you put four calculators on the desk and say to a student:

“Choose whichever one you like.”

Over the last year I have been doing exactly that. In lessons, students have had access to different Casio calculators, including the older fx-991EX, the newer fx-991CW, the established graphic calculator fx-CG50, and the newer fx-CG100.

On paper, the newer models should win. They look modern. They have clearer screens. They are designed around menus rather than requiring students to remember quite so many individual buttons. They are shiny, new and, in some ways, more logical.

And yet, again and again, when students are actually solving maths and science problems under pressure, many of them reach for the older calculator.

Not because it is technically better in every way.

But because it feels faster.

And in an examination, faster often feels safer.

The Calculator Is Not Just a Tool — It Is Part of the Student’s Thinking

Teachers often talk about calculators as if they are simply devices for getting answers.

That is not quite true.

For many GCSE and A-level students, the calculator becomes part of the way they think through a problem. It is not separate from the mathematics. It is woven into the process.

A student solving a quadratic, checking a standard form answer, converting a fraction to a decimal, using trigonometry, finding a probability, or working out a physics calculation is not just pressing buttons. They are following a sequence of thought.

That sequence might look like this:

  1. Understand the question.
  2. Decide what mathematics or science is needed.
  3. Set up the calculation.
  4. Use the calculator correctly.
  5. Interpret the answer.
  6. Decide whether the answer is sensible.

The calculator sits right in the middle of that process.

If the student has to stop and think, “Where has Casio hidden that function?”, the flow is broken.

That is where the difference between a button-driven calculator and a menu-driven calculator becomes important.

Button-Driven Calculators: The Comfort of Muscle Memory

The older Casio fx-991EX has become familiar to many students. They know where things are. They have developed muscle memory.

They do not always know the official name of the function. They may not even fully understand the structure of the calculator. But they know the route.

For example:

“I press this, then this, then this.”

That may not sound very sophisticated, but it matters.

When a student is nervous, sitting in an exam hall, trying to remember whether the answer should be in standard form, three significant figures, radians, degrees, fractions or decimals, familiarity matters enormously.

The older models often feel quicker because important functions have obvious dedicated keys or familiar shortcuts.

The most common example in my lessons is the S⇔D button.

Students love it.

They use it constantly.

They want to switch between exact form and decimal form quickly. They want to see whether an answer of ( \frac{7}{12} ) is approximately 0.583. They want to check whether a surd answer looks reasonable. They want to move quickly between the exact mathematical answer and the practical scientific answer.

On the older calculator, this feels instant.

On the newer menu-driven models, even where the same function exists, students can feel as though they have to go looking for it. A three-step menu may be perfectly logical, but to a student under pressure it can feel like a delay.

That delay may only be a few seconds.

But a few seconds in an exam can feel like a lifetime.

Menu-Driven Calculators: A Better Idea, But Not Always a Better Experience

The newer Casio calculators are trying to solve a real problem.

Modern scientific and graphic calculators can do a huge number of things. They can solve equations, handle distributions, work with vectors and matrices, plot graphs, process statistics, and in the case of graphic calculators, display mathematical ideas visually.

The difficulty is obvious: where do you put all those functions?

If every function has its own button, the calculator becomes a forest of symbols. Students spend their time hunting for tiny labels printed above keys. Some functions require SHIFT, ALPHA, menus, modes and sub-menus.

A menu-driven system tries to make that easier.

Instead of expecting students to remember obscure button combinations, the calculator guides them through options. This can be very helpful when students are learning a function for the first time.

For example, a menu can make it clearer that the student is choosing between:

  • calculation
  • statistics
  • equation solving
  • distribution
  • table
  • spreadsheet
  • complex numbers
  • vectors
  • matrices
  • graphing

That is sensible.

It is also closer to the way students use phones, tablets and computers. They are used to icons, menus and scrolling.

But there is a problem.

Calculators are not phones.

Students do not use calculators in relaxed conditions while browsing. They use them when they are trying to solve difficult problems, often while being timed, often while anxious, and often while also trying to remember the mathematics.

A menu can be more logical and still feel slower.

That is the key point.

The Shiny Calculator Test

I have found this fascinating in lessons.

Put the newer calculator on the desk and students are interested. They pick it up. They look at the screen. They notice that it feels modern. They may even say it looks better.

Then give them a real problem.

A physics calculation involving standard form.

A trigonometry question.

A simultaneous equation.

A probability calculation.

A surd answer that needs converting to a decimal.

A statistics question requiring the mean and standard deviation.

Suddenly, many students go back to the calculator they know.

The decision is not really about the calculator. It is about confidence.

The student is saying:

“I know I can get the answer out of this one.”

That is an important teaching point.

The best calculator is not always the one with the newest interface. It is the one the student can use accurately, quickly and confidently.

fx-991EX vs fx-991CW: The Scientific Calculator Battle

The fx-991EX has been a very popular advanced scientific calculator. It has natural textbook display, many advanced functions, and a layout that students often become comfortable with after repeated use.

The fx-991CW represents a newer style of working. It has a clearer display, a more modern interface and a menu-based structure.

For a teacher, the newer layout has advantages. It can make it easier to explain where certain functions live. Instead of saying, “Press SHIFT, then this key, then choose option 3,” you can sometimes guide students through a clearer menu.

However, for students who already know the fx-991EX, the change can feel like being moved from a familiar kitchen into a newly designed one.

Everything may be cleaner.

Everything may be labelled.

But the teaspoons are no longer in the drawer where you expect them.

That is not a trivial issue.

In maths and science, students need fluency. They need to focus on the problem, not the device.

A student solving a chemistry calculation on moles does not want to be thinking about calculator navigation. A physics student resolving forces does not want to waste mental effort finding a function. A maths student doing binomial probabilities does not want to lose confidence because the route has changed.

The fx-991CW may be a better design for a new student starting from scratch.

But for many existing students, the fx-991EX still feels like home.

fx-CG50 vs fx-CG100: Graphic Calculators and the Same Problem on a Larger Scale

The same issue appears with graphic calculators.

The fx-CG50 is already well established. It is powerful, colourful and capable of supporting students through GCSE Further Maths, A-level Maths, A-level Further Maths and beyond. It can graph functions, handle statistics, work with matrices and vectors, and help students visualise ideas that are otherwise quite abstract.

The fx-CG100 is the newer model. It has a more modern ClassWiz-style interface, clearer menus and a design intended to make the move from scientific calculator to graphic calculator smoother.

That is a good idea.

Students moving from a scientific calculator to a graphic calculator often struggle because the graphic calculator feels like a completely different machine. If the newer scientific and graphic calculators share a similar style of navigation, that could help.

But again, the classroom question is not only:

“Which calculator has the better interface?”

It is also:

“Which calculator can the student use when they are tired, nervous and halfway through a difficult question?”

For a confident student who is learning the newer system from the beginning, the fx-CG100 may feel more logical.

For a student who has already invested time in the fx-CG50, the older model may still feel quicker.

The Hidden Skill: Calculator Fluency

One of the mistakes students make is thinking that calculator use does not need practice.

They assume that because a calculator gives answers, they can simply pick it up when needed.

That is not how it works.

Calculator fluency is a skill.

Students need to know:

  • how to enter fractions correctly
  • how to convert between exact and decimal answers
  • how to use standard form
  • how to check whether the calculator is in degrees or radians
  • how to use brackets properly
  • how to store and recall values
  • how to solve equations
  • how to use table mode
  • how to calculate statistics
  • how to find probabilities
  • how to use graphing functions, if they have a graphic calculator

More importantly, they need to know when the calculator answer is unreasonable.

A calculator will quite happily give a student a wrong answer if the student enters the wrong calculation.

It does not raise an eyebrow.

It does not say, “Are you sure a car is travelling at 4,000 metres per second?”

It does not say, “That pH value looks suspicious.”

It does not say, “You appear to have used radians instead of degrees.”

That is the teacher’s job.

Eventually, it becomes the student’s job.

Practical Example 1: Fractions and Decimals

A student works out an answer and gets:

[
\frac{13}{8}
]

In pure maths, this may be a perfectly good answer.

In a physics problem, the student may need to understand that this is:

[
1.625
]

On the older calculator, the student presses S⇔D and instantly sees the decimal.

That quick conversion helps them judge the answer.

Is 1.625 metres sensible?

Is 1.625 seconds sensible?

Is 1.625 amps sensible?

The button is not just a convenience. It supports understanding.

If the same task requires going into a format menu, the student may still get there, but the interruption is greater.

For a confident student, that may not matter.

For a nervous student, it does.

Practical Example 2: Standard Form in Science

In GCSE and A-level science, standard form appears constantly.

Students may need to calculate values such as:

[
6.02 \times 10^{23}
]

or

[
3.0 \times 10^8
]

or

[
1.6 \times 10^{-19}
]

The calculator needs to become invisible. Students should be thinking about Avogadro’s constant, the speed of light, charge, energy, wavelength or frequency — not about where the exponential key is.

When a student uses the same calculator every week, they gradually become fluent.

They stop fighting the machine.

That is when the science improves.

Practical Example 3: Graphing Calculators and A-Level Maths

Graphic calculators can be enormously useful in A-level Maths.

They allow students to see the shape of a function, check the number of roots, explore transformations and understand why an answer makes sense.

For example, when solving:

[
x^3 - 4x - 1 = 0
]

a graphic calculator can help students see that the equation has more than one solution.

That visual understanding is valuable.

But only if the student can use the calculator confidently.

If half the lesson is spent finding the graphing mode, setting the window, adjusting the scale and working out how to trace intersections, the technology becomes a barrier rather than a support.

This is why the choice between the fx-CG50 and fx-CG100 is not simply about specifications.

It is about teaching time, student confidence and repeated practice.

The Teacher’s Dilemma

As a teacher, I can see both sides.

The newer calculators are trying to make things clearer. They are more menu driven. They reduce the number of buttons students need to search through. They look more like modern technology. In many ways, they are probably the direction calculators need to go.

But students do not always choose what is technically newest.

They choose what helps them survive the question in front of them.

That is especially true for students who are already anxious about maths.

A student who is unsure about algebra does not need another layer of uncertainty from the calculator.

A student who struggles with physics calculations does not need to wonder where the decimal conversion has gone.

A student who is already worried about an exam does not want to change calculator systems in May.

When Should Students Change Calculator?

My advice is simple.

Do not change calculator just before an exam unless there is a very good reason.

A new calculator needs a learning period. Students need to use it for homework, classwork, revision and past papers before relying on it in an exam.

Ideally, students should use the same calculator throughout a course.

For GCSE students moving into A-level Maths, the summer can be a good time to change, because there is time to practise.

For A-level students already deep into Year 13, changing calculator may do more harm than good unless they are prepared to put in the practice.

For students buying their first advanced calculator, the newer menu-driven models may be perfectly sensible.

For students who already know the older models well, there is no shame in staying with what works.

The Real Lesson: Technology Must Serve Learning

The point of a calculator is not to be impressive.

The point of a calculator is to help students do mathematics and science more effectively.

If a new interface reduces confusion, that is excellent.

If it slows students down because they cannot find familiar functions, that matters.

If a calculator helps students explore graphs, understand statistics and check answers, it is doing its job.

If it becomes another thing to panic about, it is not.

The best calculator is the one that the student can use confidently, accurately and fluently.

Sometimes that will be the newest model.

Sometimes it will be the older one with the familiar button.

Conclusion: Shiny Is Not the Same as Useful

The newer Casio calculators are clever, modern and thoughtfully designed. The move towards clearer menus makes sense, especially as calculators become more powerful and include more functions.

But my small classroom experiment has shown something important.

Students do not only choose features.

They choose confidence.

They choose familiarity.

They choose the calculator that lets them get on with the maths.

For many students, the older button-driven models still feel easier because they have already built the habits. They know where things are. They trust the route. They like the S⇔D button because it does exactly what they want, quickly and without fuss.

The newer models may well become the natural choice for the next generation of students, especially if they start with them early enough. But teachers and parents should not underestimate the value of fluency.

A calculator is not just bought.

It is learned.

And, like most things in maths and science, the learning takes practice.

24 June 2026

Is Now the Right Time to Start Thinking About a GCSE to A-Level Maths Conversion Course?


Is Now the Right Time to Start Thinking About a GCSE to A-Level Maths Conversion Course?

GCSE exams are over. The calculators have been put away, the formula sheets have disappeared into the bottom of a bag, and for many students the summer has begun.

And quite right too.

Students have worked hard. They need rest, sleep, sunshine, hobbies, family time and a bit of freedom from revision timetables. But there is also a danger hidden in the long summer holiday: six, eight or even ten weeks is a long time to forget how to factorise a quadratic, rearrange a formula or solve a simultaneous equation.

For students planning to take A-Level Maths, that gap between GCSE and September can make a huge difference.

A-Level Maths does not begin gently. It assumes that the key GCSE skills are already secure. The difficulty is that many students arrive in September having technically “covered” the work but not yet mastered it. They may have passed GCSE Maths well, but that does not always mean they are ready for the speed, depth and algebraic confidence required at A-Level.

That is why a GCSE to A-Level Maths conversion course can be so valuable.

The Problem With the Long Summer

The summer after GCSEs feels like a finish line. In reality, for students going on to A-Level Maths, it is more like a bridge.

The trouble is that bridges need to be crossed. They cannot simply be admired from a distance while eating ice cream.

A student who stops doing Maths completely after the final GCSE paper may find that by September:

  • algebra feels rusty
  • fractions have become suspicious again
  • graphs seem less familiar
  • trigonometry has faded
  • solving equations takes longer
  • confidence has dropped
  • the pace of A-Level lessons feels alarming

This is not because the student is weak. It is because Maths is a skill-based subject. Like music, sport or sailing, it improves with regular practice and fades when ignored for too long.

You would not expect someone to stop practising the piano for ten weeks and then immediately play a complicated piece perfectly. Yet many students expect to leave GCSE Maths in June and step straight into A-Level Maths in September without any loss of sharpness.

A-Level Maths Is Not Just Harder GCSE Maths

One of the biggest shocks for students is that A-Level Maths is not simply GCSE Maths with larger numbers.

It is a change in style.

At GCSE, many questions guide students through the method. At A-Level, students are expected to choose methods, combine ideas and manipulate algebra with much more independence.

A GCSE question might ask a student to solve a quadratic equation. An A-Level question may require the student to form the quadratic first, rearrange it, factorise it, interpret its roots and then explain what those roots mean in a physical or graphical context.

The individual skills may all come from GCSE, but the thinking is more demanding.

This is where the conversion course becomes important. It is not about racing ahead for the sake of it. It is about making sure the foundations are strong enough to support what comes next.

What Should Students Have Learnt at GCSE?

In theory, students arriving at A-Level Maths should already be confident with a large body of GCSE content. In practice, many students have gaps.

Some can solve equations but struggle to rearrange formulae. Some can use trigonometry in a right-angled triangle but panic when the diagram is not drawn in the usual way. Some can factorise simple quadratics but cannot spot a common factor or deal with algebraic fractions.

The key GCSE skills that need to be secure include:

  • expanding and factorising brackets
  • solving linear and quadratic equations
  • rearranging formulae
  • working with indices and surds
  • manipulating fractions and algebraic fractions
  • solving simultaneous equations
  • understanding straight-line graphs
  • using trigonometry confidently
  • recognising transformations of graphs
  • working accurately without over-relying on a calculator

These are not optional extras. They are the tools students use constantly at A-Level.

When these skills are weak, students spend too much mental energy on the mechanics and not enough on the new ideas.

The Algebra Problem

The biggest issue is usually algebra.

Many GCSE students learn enough algebra to pass the exam, but not always enough to use algebra fluently. At A-Level, algebra becomes the language of the subject.

Students need to be able to move symbols around confidently. They need to know when to expand, when to factorise, when to simplify and when to leave an expression alone. They need to recognise structure.

This is what I often call “doing cleverer things with algebra”.

For example, students may know that:

x² - 9 = (x - 3)(x + 3)

But do they immediately recognise that:

4x² - 25 = (2x - 5)(2x + 5)

Or that:

a² - b² = (a - b)(a + b)

Or that this structure appears again and again in coordinate geometry, calculus, sequences and mechanics?

A-Level Maths rewards students who can see patterns. A conversion course gives time to slow down, rebuild fluency and help students understand why the methods work.

Topics That A-Level Often Assumes Rather Than Teaches Slowly

One of the difficulties with A-Level Maths is that some important skills are used immediately but not always taught slowly enough.

Teachers have a full specification to get through. They cannot spend weeks re-teaching GCSE algebra. As a result, students who are not already fluent can feel behind from the first few lessons.

A good conversion course can cover areas such as:

Rearranging Formulae Properly

Not just simple formulae, but more complicated expressions involving powers, roots, fractions and brackets.

For example:

v² = u² + 2as

Rearranging this for different variables is essential in mechanics, but students often make errors because they have not had enough practice with multi-step rearrangement.

Algebraic Fractions

Many students dislike algebraic fractions because they look more complicated than numerical fractions. But the rules are the same.

A-Level Maths uses algebraic fractions in functions, differentiation, integration and proof. Students need to be comfortable simplifying them and solving equations involving them.

Indices and Surds

Powers and roots appear everywhere in A-Level Maths. Students need to understand index laws, fractional powers and negative powers, not just memorise them.

Graph Transformations

A-Level students need to understand what happens when a graph is stretched, shifted, reflected or transformed. This is much easier when they have a secure mental picture of the original graph.

Proof and Mathematical Explanation

GCSE often includes some proof, but A-Level requires a more mature style of mathematical argument. Students need to move from “I know the answer” to “I can explain why this must be true”.

Practical Examples From Tuition

In tuition, I often find that the most useful lessons are not always the most dramatic ones.

A student may arrive wanting to start differentiation or trigonometric identities, but the real problem may be that they are still not confident expanding double brackets or simplifying expressions.

That may not sound exciting, but it is essential.

For example, before a student can confidently differentiate:

y = (3x² - 5x + 2)(x - 4)

they need to decide whether to expand first. That requires algebraic confidence.

Before they can solve a coordinate geometry problem, they need to handle gradients, equations of lines and simultaneous equations.

Before they can tackle mechanics, they need to rearrange formulae accurately and understand how one variable depends on another.

This is why the conversion course is not just revision. It is preparation.

It strengthens the tools before students are asked to build something bigger.

Why Starting Early Helps

There is a big difference between starting A-Level Maths in September feeling rusty and starting with confidence.

Students who do some preparation over the summer often find that:

  • the first few weeks feel less intimidating
  • algebraic manipulation is quicker
  • they make fewer careless errors
  • they understand new topics more easily
  • they are more willing to ask deeper questions
  • they avoid the early panic that can damage confidence

A-Level Maths is a demanding course, but it is much easier when students begin with momentum.

The aim is not to spend the whole summer doing Maths. That would be miserable, and probably not very effective. The aim is regular, focused work that keeps the brain active and fills the gaps before September.

Little and often works better than a frantic burst at the end of August.

What Our GCSE to A-Level Maths Conversion Course Does

Our conversion course is designed to help students make the transition from GCSE to A-Level Maths with confidence.

It covers two main areas.

First, we revisit the GCSE skills that students should already know but often need to strengthen. This includes algebra, graphs, equations, trigonometry, indices, surds and problem-solving.

Second, we introduce some of the thinking and techniques that will be needed at A-Level. This does not mean rushing through the course before it begins. It means giving students a taste of what is coming and helping them develop the habits they will need.

We look at how questions are structured, how to set out working clearly, how to avoid common traps and how to think mathematically rather than just follow a memorised method.

A good conversion course should not make students feel overwhelmed. It should make them feel prepared.

Confidence Matters

One of the biggest benefits of a summer conversion course is confidence.

Many students who choose A-Level Maths are capable, but some are quietly worried. They know it is a respected subject. They know it opens doors. They may also know that it has a reputation for being difficult.

The right preparation helps remove some of that fear.

When students see that A-Level Maths grows out of GCSE Maths, they begin to understand that the subject is not magic. It is built step by step.

The problem is rarely that students cannot do Maths. More often, they have missing steps, weak foundations or a lack of fluency.

Once those gaps are addressed, students often improve very quickly.

A Personal Reflection

After many years of teaching, I have seen the same pattern again and again.

Some students arrive in September assuming that a good GCSE grade means they are automatically ready for A-Level Maths. Then, a few weeks later, they are surprised by the pace.

Others decide to keep working gently over the summer. They revise the key GCSE skills, practise algebra, look ahead at the first A-Level topics and arrive with a much clearer idea of what is expected.

Those students usually have a much smoother start.

The difference is not always natural ability. It is preparation.

Maths rewards steady work. It rewards accuracy, patience and practice. It rewards students who are willing to go back and fix the foundations before building the next floor.

Conclusion: The Best Time to Prepare Is Before the Panic Starts

So, is now the right time to start thinking about a GCSE to A-Level Maths conversion course?

Yes.

Not because students should lose their summer. Not because they should be buried under textbooks the moment GCSE exams finish. But because the gap between GCSE and A-Level is real, and the students who prepare for it give themselves a genuine advantage.

A-Level Maths is one of the most useful and respected subjects a student can take. It supports Physics, Engineering, Economics, Computing, Chemistry and many other future pathways. But it needs strong foundations.

The summer after GCSEs is not just a break. It is an opportunity.

Used well, it can turn uncertainty into confidence, rusty skills into fluent algebra, and September panic into a calm, prepared start.

For students planning to take A-Level Maths, a conversion course may be one of the best investments they make before the course has even begun.

23 June 2026

Teaching Particle Physics Without a Hadron Collider in the Back Garden

 


Teaching Particle Physics Without a Hadron Collider in the Back Garden

There are many pieces of science equipment I would quite like to own.

A decent scanning electron microscope would be nice. A small radio telescope would be useful. A particle accelerator would certainly make A-Level Physics lessons more exciting.

But, sadly, a Hadron Collider in the back garden is probably not going to happen.

Apart from the cost, the planning permission might be difficult to explain to the neighbours.

Yet this creates a real teaching problem. Students still need to understand nuclear structure and particle physics. They need to know about protons, neutrons and electrons, but also quarks, leptons, hadrons, bosons and the strange world of particles that cannot simply be placed on the laboratory bench.

So the challenge becomes this:

How do we make invisible physics visible?

The Problem With Teaching Nuclear Structure

At GCSE, students usually begin with the familiar model of the atom: a tiny central nucleus containing protons and neutrons, with electrons arranged around it.

That is already difficult enough.

The atom is mostly empty space. The nucleus is incredibly small. The forces involved are not like the forces students meet when they push a trolley or stretch a spring.

Then, at A-Level, the picture becomes even stranger. Protons and neutrons are no longer treated as simple particles. They are hadrons, made from quarks. Electrons are leptons. Forces are explained using exchange particles. Students meet ideas such as baryons, mesons, neutrinos and bosons.

This is fascinating physics, but it can also become a list of names to memorise.

And that is the danger.

If students simply learn that a proton is made from two up quarks and one down quark, but never understand what that means or why it matters, then particle physics becomes a vocabulary test rather than a science lesson.

When the Equipment Is Too Big for the Laboratory

Some topics in science are easy to demonstrate.

If I want to teach moments, I can use a metre rule, masses and a pivot. If I want to teach waves, I can use a ripple tank, a slinky, a signal generator or a microwave kit. If I want to teach electricity, I can build circuits on the bench.

Particle physics is different.

I cannot place a quark under a microscope. I cannot put a neutrino in a tray. I cannot ask a student to hold a boson carefully between finger and thumb.

The real experiments require enormous machines, huge detectors, international collaboration and budgets that are slightly beyond the reach of most private tuition laboratories.

So instead of trying to reproduce CERN in Hemel Hempstead, the aim is to build understanding through models, simulations, analogies, practical demonstrations and carefully chosen activities.

Starting With the Atom: Protons, Neutrons and Electrons

The first step is to make sure students really understand the basic structure of the atom.

A useful practical approach is to compare different models of the atom and ask what each model explains well and what it fails to explain.

For example:

  • the solid sphere model explains matter as tiny particles, but not charge;
  • the plum pudding model introduces electrons, but has no central nucleus;
  • the nuclear model explains Rutherford’s alpha scattering experiment;
  • the Bohr model helps with electron energy levels, but is still not the full quantum picture.

Students can then build model atoms using counters, magnets, beads or printed cards. Protons and neutrons can go in the nucleus, while electrons are placed in shells.

This sounds simple, but it helps students see important ideas:

  • atomic number depends on protons;
  • mass number depends on protons plus neutrons;
  • isotopes have the same number of protons but different numbers of neutrons;
  • ions form when electrons are gained or lost.

Before moving on to quarks and leptons, students need this foundation to be solid.

Making Rutherford Scattering Practical

One of the best examples of invisible physics becoming practical is Rutherford’s alpha scattering experiment.

Of course, I am not going to fire alpha particles at gold foil in a home laboratory every week. But the idea can still be explored.

A simple classroom model can be made using marbles or ball bearings rolled towards a hidden object under a sheet of paper. Students observe how the moving marbles are deflected and then try to infer the shape or position of the hidden object.

This is not the same as alpha scattering, but it teaches the key scientific idea:

We often discover the structure of things we cannot see by looking at how other things behave when they interact with them.

That is a powerful concept.

It links Rutherford’s experiment to modern particle detectors. We may not see the particle directly, but we can detect tracks, energy changes and patterns that reveal what must have happened.

Radioactivity: The Practical Doorway Into Nuclear Physics

Radioactivity provides one of the most useful practical routes into nuclear structure.

With suitable school-safe equipment and proper risk assessment, students can explore background radiation, count rates, shielding and the inverse-square relationship.

Even without radioactive sources, a portable radiation detector can be used to measure natural background radiation in different locations. Students can compare readings near different rocks, building materials or at different altitudes if suitable data is available.

This immediately raises interesting questions:

Why is there background radiation at all?

Where does it come from?

Why does the count rate fluctuate?

Why do we measure radioactive decay statistically rather than expecting perfectly regular behaviour?

A simple dice simulation can model radioactive decay. Each die represents an unstable nucleus. Roll the dice, remove any that land on a chosen number, and repeat. Students can then plot the number of dice remaining against the number of rolls.

This gives them a practical feel for half-life, randomness and exponential decay.

It also helps them understand why nuclear physics is about probability, not certainty.

Using Simulations When Reality Is Too Small

Good simulations are invaluable for particle physics.

They allow students to change variables, test ideas and visualise things that cannot be seen directly.

Useful simulation topics include:

  • building atoms and isotopes;
  • Rutherford scattering;
  • radioactive decay and half-life;
  • conservation of charge, baryon number and lepton number;
  • particle collisions;
  • tracks in particle detectors;
  • quark combinations in baryons and mesons.

The key is not simply to let students play with a simulation. They need tasks.

For example, instead of saying, “Explore this simulation,” I might ask:

  • Build three isotopes of carbon and explain what changes.
  • Create a positive ion and explain why it is positive.
  • Increase the energy of incoming particles and describe what happens to the scattering pattern.
  • Identify which particle combinations are allowed and which are impossible.
  • Explain why a proposed decay breaks a conservation rule.

This turns the simulation from a moving diagram into an investigation.

Turning Quarks Into a Card Game

Quarks are difficult because students cannot visualise them in the same way as protons, neutrons or electrons.

One useful activity is to create particle cards.

Each card can show a particle’s properties:

  • name;
  • charge;
  • baryon number;
  • lepton number;
  • strangeness, where required;
  • whether it is a quark, lepton, hadron, baryon, meson or boson.

Students can then be challenged to build particles from smaller components.

For example:

  • proton: up, up, down;
  • neutron: up, down, down;
  • mesons: quark and antiquark combinations.

They can also test whether reactions are allowed by checking conservation laws.

This becomes a scientific puzzle. Students are not just memorising facts; they are using rules.

That is much closer to real physics.

The Particle Zoo Needs Organisation

One of the reasons students struggle with particle physics is that the names arrive quickly.

Hadron. Baryon. Meson. Lepton. Boson. Muon. Neutrino. Pion. Kaon.

It can feel as though someone has emptied a box of strange words onto the desk.

So I like to organise the topic visually.

A large classification chart helps:

Particles

→ Hadrons
→ Baryons, such as protons and neutrons
→ Mesons, made from quark-antiquark pairs

→ Leptons
→ Electrons, muons, neutrinos and their relatives

→ Bosons
→ Exchange particles associated with forces

Students can then place examples into the correct groups.

This simple sorting activity often reveals misunderstandings. A student may know the word “lepton” but not realise that an electron is one. They may know that protons are in the nucleus but not realise that protons are also hadrons.

The chart helps them see the structure behind the vocabulary.

Practical Analogies for Exchange Particles

Bosons and exchange particles are especially difficult because they are not like ordinary objects being thrown around.

A classic classroom analogy is to imagine two people on boats throwing a heavy ball between them. Each throw changes their motion, giving an idea of how an interaction can involve an exchanged object.

Like all analogies, it is imperfect. But it gives students somewhere to start.

Another useful activity is a “messenger particle” game. Students act as particles and pass cards representing interactions. The rule is that no force can act unless the correct exchange particle is involved.

This can lead to discussion of the four fundamental interactions:

  • gravitational;
  • electromagnetic;
  • strong nuclear;
  • weak nuclear.

At GCSE, this may only need a simple introduction. At A-Level, it becomes a route into beta decay, neutrinos and conservation laws.

Making Detector Physics Understandable

Modern particle physics relies on detectors.

This is a wonderful teaching opportunity because students can think like scientists.

Instead of asking, “What is a muon?” we can ask:

“How would we know a muon had passed through a detector?”

Students can examine simplified particle tracks and decide what might have happened. They can compare straight tracks, curved tracks, branching events and missing energy.

This helps them understand that particle physics is detective work. Scientists are not watching tiny billiard balls collide under a microscope. They are reconstructing events from evidence.

That idea is important across the whole of science.

The Role of Games in Serious Physics

Games are sometimes dismissed as a distraction, but a well-designed game can be a powerful teaching tool.

For particle physics, games can help students practise:

  • classification;
  • conservation laws;
  • charge calculations;
  • quark combinations;
  • decay pathways;
  • interpreting evidence.

A particle “Top Trumps” style game can compare mass, charge, lifetime or interaction type. A reaction-building game can challenge students to construct allowed decays. A detector mystery game can ask students to identify what happened from the clues left behind.

The important point is that the game must have physics built into the rules.

If the rules require students to apply scientific ideas, then the learning happens naturally.

Why This Matters

It might be tempting to think that particle physics is too advanced, too abstract or too remote from everyday life.

But it matters.

Nuclear physics links to medicine, cancer treatment, imaging, power generation, radiation safety, archaeology, smoke alarms, geology and space science.

Particle physics teaches students how science works at the very edge of what can be measured. It shows them that our understanding of matter has changed dramatically over time and will probably continue to change.

It also teaches humility.

The ordinary matter around us is not ordinary at all. A wooden desk, a glass of water, a human body and a sailing boat are all made from atoms, and those atoms are made from particles governed by forces that students can begin to understand.

That is extraordinary.

My Teaching Challenge

For me, the challenge is to keep finding ways to make this topic practical.

I may not have a particle accelerator in the garden, but I can still give students:

  • models they can build; I have a working particle accelerator made from a mixing bowl.
  • experiments they can measure;
  • simulations they can investigate;
  • games that make them apply the rules;
  • diagrams that organise the ideas;
  • questions that force real understanding.

That is the heart of good science teaching.

Not every topic can be demonstrated directly, but every topic can be made more understandable.

Conclusion: Making the Invisible Real

The physics of nuclear structure and particle physics can seem impossibly abstract.

Students are being asked to think about things that are too small to see, too fast to follow and too expensive to investigate directly in a normal school or tuition laboratory.

But that does not mean the topic has to become dry theory.

With the right mixture of practical work, models, simulations, games and careful explanation, students can begin to see how the invisible world of particles shapes the visible world around them.

I may not be building a Hadron Collider behind the laboratory.

But I can still help students understand why the particles inside the atom matter, how scientists investigate them, and why the smallest things in the universe often lead to the biggest questions in physics.

22 June 2026

Biology Is Changing: From Looking at Life to Redesigning It



Biology Is Changing: From Looking at Life to Redesigning It

Biology has always been about life. Cells, tissues, organs, enzymes, DNA, inheritance, evolution and ecosystems have not suddenly changed. A cell is still a cell. A mitochondrion is still a mitochondrion. A protein is still made from amino acids. DNA is still the molecule of inheritance.

What has changed is how we can look at these things.

When I was at school, much of biology was taught through diagrams in textbooks, microscope slides, preserved specimens and a fair amount of imagination. We learnt about proteins, but for most students they were rather mysterious things: long chains of amino acids that somehow folded into complicated shapes and then did useful jobs inside cells.

Today, students are growing up in a completely different biological world.

We can now use computer algorithms to predict the shape of proteins.  AlphaFold is a good modern example because it predicts protein 3D structures from amino acid sequences. We can use PCR to amplify tiny amounts of DNA. We can separate DNA fragments using electrophoresis. We can use digital microscopes, gene databases, imaging software, sensors and computer modelling to explore biology in ways that would have seemed almost science fiction when I was at school.

Biology has not become less biological. It has become more technological.

And that is why the next generation of biologists will need to be far more than people who can label a diagram of a cell.

They will need to be practical scientists, computer users, data analysts, ethical thinkers and problem solvers.

Biology Used to Be About Looking

For many years, school biology began with looking.

Students looked down microscopes at onion cells, cheek cells, pond water and prepared slides. They looked at diagrams of the heart, lungs, kidneys and digestive system. They looked at leaves, flowers, insects and sometimes the unfortunate remains of something that had been dissected many years earlier and preserved in a jar.

There is still enormous value in this.

A student who has never looked properly at a leaf under a microscope cannot really appreciate stomata. A student who has never seen blood cells, xylem vessels or root hair cells is often just memorising words rather than understanding living structures.

Practical observation still matters.

However, looking is no longer enough.

Modern biology now asks much bigger questions:

How does a protein fold?

How can a mutation change the function of an enzyme?

How can we identify someone from a tiny DNA sample?

How can we design a medicine that fits a receptor?

How can we use genetic information to understand disease?

How can we alter bacteria so that they produce useful substances?

How can we use biological systems to solve environmental problems?

These questions are not answered simply by drawing neat labelled diagrams. They require new tools, new techniques and a new way of thinking.

From Protein Diagrams to Protein Prediction

Proteins are one of the best examples of how biology has changed.

At GCSE and A-Level, students learn that proteins are made from amino acids joined together in a chain. They learn about the primary, secondary, tertiary and sometimes quaternary structure of proteins. They learn that the shape of an enzyme’s active site is essential for its function.

That is the textbook version.

But the real wonder is this: the order of amino acids determines how the protein folds, and the folded shape determines what the protein can do.

For a long time, working out the shape of a protein was extremely difficult. Scientists used techniques such as X-ray crystallography and later other advanced methods to determine protein structures. These methods were powerful, but they were not quick or simple.

Now we have entered a new age.

Artificial intelligence systems can predict protein structures from amino acid sequences. This does not mean that laboratory work has become unnecessary, but it does mean that computers can now help biologists ask questions that would previously have taken years of experimental work.

For students, this is a huge shift.

A protein is no longer just a squiggle in a textbook. It is a three-dimensional object that can be viewed, rotated, compared and investigated on a computer screen.

Suddenly, the link between chemistry and biology becomes visible.

The amino acid sequence is chemistry.

The folded structure is biology.

The function is life.

Biology, Chemistry and Computing Are Coming Together

One of the great mistakes students sometimes make is to think of school subjects as separate boxes.

Biology is over here.

Chemistry is over there.

Physics is somewhere else.

Computing belongs in another room entirely.

Modern biology destroys that idea.

To understand modern biology properly, students need ideas from all these subjects.

They need chemistry to understand bonding, molecular shape, enzymes, proteins, DNA and drug action.

They need physics to understand imaging, microscopy, radiation, diffusion, pressure, movement and electrical signals in nerves.

They need maths to understand rates, statistics, growth curves, probability, genetics, populations and data analysis.

They need computing to handle databases, models, simulations, algorithms and biological data.

This is why biology is such an exciting subject. It is no longer just about remembering the parts of a flower or the stages of mitosis. Those things still matter, but they are only the beginning.

A modern biologist might spend one day in a laboratory, another day analysing DNA sequences on a computer, and another day thinking about how to design a protein that could be used in medicine or environmental technology.

PCR: Making Enough DNA to Study

Another technique that has changed biology is PCR: the polymerase chain reaction.

PCR allows scientists to take a small amount of DNA and make many copies of a specific region. This is why it is sometimes described as molecular photocopying.

This matters because many biological samples contain very little DNA. A tiny biological sample may not contain enough DNA to analyse directly. PCR changes that. It takes a small sample and amplifies the DNA so that it can be studied.

For students, this is a beautiful example of biology becoming practical technology.

The basic biological idea is simple enough:

DNA can be copied.

The technological breakthrough is controlling that copying process in a machine.

The PCR machine repeatedly heats and cools the sample so that DNA strands separate, primers bind and new DNA strands are made. After many cycles, the amount of DNA has increased enormously.

This is the sort of thing that makes students sit up when they see it properly.

It takes DNA from being an invisible idea in a textbook and turns it into something that can be used in medicine, forensic science, ancestry testing, conservation biology and research.

Electrophoresis: Seeing DNA by Separating It

Once DNA has been amplified, it often needs to be analysed. One common school-friendly method is gel electrophoresis.

In simple terms, DNA fragments are placed into wells in a gel. An electric current is applied. DNA is negatively charged, so the fragments move through the gel towards the positive electrode. Smaller fragments move more quickly and travel further than larger fragments.

The result is a pattern of bands.

To a student, this can look surprisingly simple. A few bands in a gel. A few dark lines. Nothing dramatic.

But those bands represent information.

They can show whether DNA fragments are different sizes. They can help compare samples. They can be used in teaching to demonstrate genetic variation, inheritance, restriction enzymes and DNA analysis.

This is much more powerful than merely telling students that DNA is important.

It lets them see evidence.

And science is built on evidence.

Why Practical Biology Still Matters

With all this new technology, there is a danger that biology teaching becomes too abstract again, but in a different way.

Instead of memorising diagrams from a textbook, students might memorise phrases about PCR, genetic engineering and protein folding without really understanding them.

That is not enough.

Students need to see, do, measure, compare and question.

This is why practical biology matters so much.

A student who has used a microscope understands magnification far better than one who has only copied down the formula.

A student who has watched osmosis happen in potato cylinders understands water movement better than one who has just written “water moves from high water potential to low water potential”.

A student who has seen enzymes change reaction rates understands active sites and denaturation more clearly.

A student who has separated substances using chromatography or modelled DNA analysis using electrophoresis begins to understand that biology is not just a set of facts. It is a way of investigating life.

In my own teaching, I find that students often believe they understand a topic until they have to explain what is happening in an experiment. That is when the gaps appear.

They may know the word “enzyme”, but not be able to explain why temperature affects rate.

They may know DNA contains genetic information, but not understand why PCR is useful.

They may know proteins have shapes, but not understand why shape controls function.

Practical work exposes these gaps — and then helps fill them.

The New Breed of Biologist

We are now building a new breed of biologist.

These students may still study cells, tissues and organ systems, but they will also need to understand data, computing and molecular technology.

They may still look at plants, insects and pond water, but they may also analyse DNA, use digital imaging, interpret computer models and explore biological databases.

They may still learn about enzymes in digestion, but they may also learn how designed proteins could be used in medicine, industry or environmental protection.

They may still learn about inheritance, but they will also need to think carefully about genetic testing, gene editing and the ethical questions that come with biological power.

This is where biology becomes exciting, but also serious.

If we can understand life at the molecular level, we may be able to solve problems that once seemed impossible.

We may be able to design better medicines.

We may be able to detect disease earlier.

We may be able to engineer organisms to produce useful materials.

We may be able to protect endangered species using genetic information.

We may be able to understand ecosystems with far greater detail.

But we must also ask important questions.

Just because we can do something, should we?

Who controls the technology?

Who benefits from it?

What are the risks?

What happens if biological systems are changed without enough thought?

Modern biology needs knowledge, but it also needs wisdom.

Why This Matters for Students

For GCSE students, this means that biology should not be treated as a memory test.

Yes, there is a lot to learn. Biology has a huge amount of content. Students need to know definitions, processes and key examples.

But the best biology students do more than memorise.

They link ideas.

They understand how structure relates to function.

They connect enzymes to proteins, proteins to DNA, DNA to inheritance, inheritance to evolution, and evolution to biodiversity.

They understand that a required practical is not just something to write up for school. It is a small version of how real science works.

For A-Level students, the challenge becomes even greater.

They need to move from simple descriptions to precise biological explanations. They need to understand molecular biology, genetics, biochemistry, statistics and experimental design. They need to be comfortable with data. They need to interpret unfamiliar contexts.

The exams increasingly reward students who can think, not just recall.

That is why learning biology properly is so important.

It is not enough to say, “I revised enzymes.”

The real question is:

Can you explain how the shape of an enzyme is determined?

Can you explain how a mutation might change that shape?

Can you explain how that could affect a metabolic pathway?

Can you interpret a graph showing enzyme activity?

Can you link this to disease, biotechnology or evolution?

That is real biology.

Biology in the Classroom, the Laboratory and the Future

One of the reasons I enjoy teaching biology is that it sits right on the edge between the familiar and the extraordinary.

A pond sample contains tiny organisms moving about under a microscope.

A leaf has stomata opening and closing.

A cheek cell contains a nucleus with DNA.

A food test changes colour.

A plant shoot loses water through transpiration.

These are simple school experiments, but they are connected to enormous scientific ideas.

The same biology that explains pond organisms also connects to ecology and biodiversity.

The same biology that explains enzymes also connects to medicine and biotechnology.

The same DNA in a school lesson connects to forensic science, genetic disease, ancestry, evolution and modern research.

This is why students need to experience biology as a living subject.

Not just a list of pages to revise.

Not just a set of diagrams to copy.

Not just a collection of required practicals to tick off.

Biology is becoming one of the most important subjects of the future because it is about life itself — and increasingly, about how we understand, protect and possibly redesign parts of that life.

Conclusion: The Future of Biology Starts With Understanding

Biology is changing, but not because cells have changed.

Cells still divide.

Enzymes still catalyse reactions.

DNA still carries genetic information.

Proteins still fold into shapes that determine their function.

What has changed is our ability to investigate these things.

We can now see more, measure more, model more and manipulate more than previous generations of students could have imagined.

That means biology education has to change as well.

Students need the fundamentals. They still need to understand cells, tissues, organs, enzymes, DNA, inheritance and ecosystems. Without these foundations, the new technology makes little sense.

But they also need to see where biology is going.

They need to understand PCR, electrophoresis, protein structure, genetic technology, digital microscopy, bioinformatics and the ethical questions that come with scientific power.

The biologists of the future may not simply study life.

They may help redesign medicine, agriculture, conservation and environmental technology.

That future starts with education.

It starts with students learning the basics properly.

It starts with practical work.

It starts with curiosity.

And perhaps most importantly, it starts with helping young people realise that biology is not just about what life is.

It is about what life might become.

20 June 2026

A-Level Computing: Choosing the Right Project Before the Code Takes Over

 


A-Level Computing: Choosing the Right Project Before the Code Takes Over

The A-Level Computing project season is now upon us, and for many Year 12 students this is the moment when the course suddenly becomes very real.

Up to this point, much of the work may have involved theory, programming exercises, algorithms, data structures, networks, databases and examination-style questions. Then the project arrives, and students are asked to do something rather different.

They have to choose a problem.

They have to design a solution.

They have to build it.

They have to test it.

They have to evaluate it.

Most importantly, they have to provide evidence that the work is genuinely theirs and that the project has developed properly over time.

That is often where the difficulty begins.

Many students think the hardest part of the project is the programming. In reality, one of the hardest parts is choosing a project that is ambitious enough to be worthwhile, but realistic enough to finish.

The Project Is Not Just About Writing Code

One of the biggest misunderstandings students have is that the project is simply about producing a clever program.

Of course, the program matters. It has to do something useful. It has to work. It should show programming skill. It should involve proper design, testing and refinement.

But the project is not only judged by the final program.

A student also needs to show the journey.

That means there must be clear evidence of:

  • the original problem
  • the intended user
  • the requirements
  • the design decisions
  • the programming process
  • testing
  • improvements
  • evaluation
  • reflection

This can be quite a shock for students who are used to being marked mainly on whether the final answer is correct.

In a Computing project, the final answer matters, but so does the route taken to get there.

It is not enough to say, “I made a booking system.”

The student needs to show why the booking system was needed, who it was for, what features it required, how those features were designed, how the code was developed, what went wrong, how problems were fixed, and whether the final system actually met the original aims.

That is a much bigger task than many students first realise.

The Trap of Choosing a Project That Is Too Big

Every year, some students begin with enormous enthusiasm.

They want to build the next social media platform.

Or an AI-powered revision tutor.

Or a complete stock control system with accounts, invoices, barcodes, graphs, passwords, cloud storage and an app.

The ambition is admirable.

The problem is that the project has to be completed by a student who is still learning.

There is nothing wrong with aiming high, but a project has to be achievable. A half-finished grand idea is usually much weaker than a smaller project that is properly designed, fully implemented, carefully tested and well documented.

A good A-Level Computing project should stretch the student, but not break them.

The best projects often have a clear central idea and then several sensible extensions. For example:

  • a revision quiz system that stores users, scores and topics
  • a booking system for a tutor, club or small business
  • a database-driven stock system for laboratory equipment
  • a sailing race results calculator
  • a simple customer management system
  • a fitness or training log with graphs
  • a science practical data logger and analysis tool
  • a flashcard system that adapts to weak topics
  • a music practice tracker
  • a small business invoice or quote generator

These projects may not sound as glamorous as creating the next YouTube, but they have a major advantage: they can be properly completed and properly evidenced.

The Project Must Have a Real User or Real Purpose

A strong project usually starts with a real need.

That does not mean the student has to solve a world-changing problem. In fact, smaller, more local problems are often better.

A student might design a system for:

  • a parent who runs a small business
  • a teacher who needs to track equipment
  • a sports coach who records performance
  • a sailing club that needs to manage duties
  • a tutor who wants to record student progress
  • a student who needs a better revision planner
  • a music teacher who tracks practice routines
  • a science department that needs to organise practical resources

The advantage of a real user is that the student can gather requirements, ask questions, test prototypes and get feedback.

This gives the project a proper shape.

Instead of writing, “I decided my program should have a login screen,” the student can explain, “The user wanted different levels of access, so I included a login system with separate permissions.”

That is a much stronger piece of evidence.

It shows that the design came from a genuine requirement, not just from adding random features to make the project look bigger.

Setting Targets Is as Important as Solving the Problem

One of the key skills in the project is target setting.

Students need to learn how to break a large piece of work into manageable sections.

For example, a booking system might be broken down into:

  1. Create a database of users.
  2. Add a login system.
  3. Allow appointments to be created.
  4. Prevent double bookings.
  5. Display upcoming bookings.
  6. Allow bookings to be edited or cancelled.
  7. Add search or filtering.
  8. Produce a summary report.
  9. Test invalid inputs.
  10. Gather user feedback and make improvements.

This gives the student a clear route through the project.

It also creates evidence.

Each target can be planned, developed, tested and evaluated. Screenshots can show progress. Code samples can show implementation. Test tables can show whether the feature worked. Reflections can explain what had to be changed.

Without targets, the project can quickly become a confused collection of code and screenshots.

With targets, the project becomes a story of development.

Evidence Matters More Than Students Expect

Students often underestimate the importance of evidence.

They may spend hours coding, but forget to record what they have done. Then, when it comes to writing up the project, they have to reconstruct the entire process from memory.

That is never ideal.

A better approach is to collect evidence as the project develops.

This might include:

  • early sketches of the interface
  • database designs
  • flowcharts
  • pseudocode
  • screenshots of prototypes
  • notes from user discussions
  • examples of errors found during testing
  • before-and-after improvements
  • code snippets with explanations
  • test plans and test results
  • feedback from the intended user

The project should not look as though it appeared fully formed at the end of the year.

It should show development.

It should show mistakes.

It should show decisions.

It should show improvement.

That is what real computing work looks like.

The Danger of Overestimating Programming Skills

Many students are more confident at the start of the project than they perhaps should be.

This is not a criticism. It is part of learning.

A student may have written small programs in Python and believe they are ready to create a full commercial-style application. They may have experimented with websites and think they can build a secure online platform. They may have used a database once and assume that a complex relational system will be straightforward.

Then reality arrives.

The login system does not work.

The database relationships become confusing.

The interface takes longer than expected.

The validation fails.

The file handling breaks.

The program works on one computer but not another.

The student discovers that writing a full project is very different from completing a short classroom exercise.

This is why project choice matters so much.

A good project should allow the student to use skills they already have, while also giving them room to develop new ones. It should not depend on learning too many unfamiliar technologies at once.

A student who is still mastering Python, for example, may be better building a strong Python and database project than trying to create a complex web application with frameworks they do not yet understand.

The AI Trap: Helpful Tool or Project Disaster?

There is also a new problem: artificial intelligence.

AI can be useful. It can help explain errors, suggest ways to structure code, generate ideas and support learning. Used carefully, it can be a helpful study aid.

But it can also ruin a project.

If a student simply asks AI to write the program, they may end up with code they do not understand, cannot explain and cannot properly adapt. Worse still, the project may no longer represent their own work.

The danger is not just academic dishonesty. The danger is that the student loses the learning process.

A project is meant to develop problem-solving skills. It is meant to make the student think through requirements, design algorithms, debug code and make improvements. If AI does the thinking, the student misses the most valuable part of the task.

There is also a practical issue. If a student cannot explain how their own code works, they are in trouble.

They need to understand every significant part of the project.

They should be able to explain:

  • why a particular algorithm was used
  • how data is stored
  • how validation works
  • how errors are handled
  • how the program was tested
  • what improvements were made
  • what limitations remain

AI should not replace that understanding.

The safest approach is for students to use AI, if allowed by their school and exam board guidance, as a support tool rather than a replacement author.

The project must still be planned, written, understood and evidenced by the student.

Why We Build a Bank of Suitable Projects

This is where good guidance makes a real difference.

At Hemel Private Tuition, we help students by discussing project ideas carefully before they commit to them. We look at whether a project is realistic, whether it has enough scope, whether it can produce suitable evidence, and whether the student has the programming skills needed to complete it.

We also keep a collection of suitable project ideas.

These are not ready-made answers. They are starting points.

The purpose is not to give students a project to copy. The purpose is to help them choose wisely.

A good project idea should be:

  • achievable
  • expandable
  • linked to a real user or purpose
  • suitable for analysis and design
  • capable of producing clear evidence
  • challenging enough to show skill
  • not so large that it collapses under its own ambition

For example, a science equipment booking system could begin simply with a list of apparatus and users. It could then be extended to include search features, availability checks, loan history, overdue warnings and reports.

A revision planner could begin with topics and deadlines. It could then be extended to include confidence ratings, spaced repetition, test scores and progress graphs.

A sailing club duty rota system could begin with members and dates. It could then be extended to include availability, role allocation, reminders and reports.

Each of these projects has a real purpose, a manageable structure and room for development.

That is exactly what many students need.

Practical Project Ideas That Can Work Well

Here are some examples of project areas that can often be shaped into strong A-Level Computing projects.

1. Revision and Learning Systems

A student could create a revision tracker, quiz system or flashcard program.

This can include:

  • topic lists
  • question banks
  • scoring
  • weak-topic analysis
  • user accounts
  • progress charts
  • spaced repetition

This type of project works well because it is familiar to students and easy to test with real users.

2. Booking and Appointment Systems

A project could manage lessons, rooms, equipment, boats, instruments or appointments.

Possible features include:

  • user login
  • date and time selection
  • availability checks
  • double-booking prevention
  • cancellation
  • search
  • reports

This gives excellent opportunities for validation, database design and testing.

3. Stock Control or Equipment Management

This is ideal for a laboratory, workshop, club or small business.

Possible features include:

  • item records
  • categories
  • quantities
  • low-stock warnings
  • loan records
  • supplier information
  • search and filtering
  • reports

This can be a strong project because it has a clear real-world purpose.

4. Sports, Music or Training Trackers

Students often enjoy projects connected to their hobbies.

A system might track:

  • sailing race results
  • gym sessions
  • music practice
  • running times
  • football statistics
  • coaching targets

These projects can include graphs, statistics, records and personal targets.

5. Small Business Tools

A student might build a system for quotes, invoices, customers or bookings.

Possible features include:

  • customer records
  • job records
  • automatic totals
  • invoice generation
  • payment status
  • search
  • monthly summaries

This can work well if the student has access to a real small business user.

The Best Project Is Not Always the Most Complicated One

A common mistake is to think that complexity automatically means quality.

It does not.

A complicated project that barely works is not better than a focused project that is properly designed, tested and evaluated.

The best projects usually have a clear central purpose.

They solve a defined problem.

They show good programming.

They include evidence of development.

They are tested properly.

They are evaluated honestly.

They leave room for improvements without pretending to be perfect.

That is far better than an overambitious idea that never quite comes together.

What Students Should Do Now

For Year 12 students beginning the project season, my advice is simple.

Do not rush into coding.

Start by choosing the right problem.

Talk to a real user if possible.

Write down the requirements.

Decide what the first working version should do.

Plan sensible extensions.

Check that the project can produce evidence.

Be honest about your current programming skills.

Then begin building slowly and carefully.

A good project is not created in one dramatic burst of programming. It is built through steady progress, testing, correction and improvement.

That is also how real software is developed.

Conclusion: Choose Wisely Before You Code

The A-Level Computing project can be one of the most rewarding parts of the course. It gives students the chance to create something of their own, solve a real problem and show that they can apply their programming skills beyond short classroom exercises.

But it can also become stressful if the project is chosen badly.

Too big, and it becomes unmanageable.

Too vague, and it becomes hard to evidence.

Too simple, and it may not show enough skill.

Too dependent on AI, and the student may not understand their own work.

The key is to choose a project that is realistic, purposeful and capable of being developed properly.

At Hemel Private Tuition, we help students make those decisions early. We support them in choosing suitable projects, setting achievable targets, collecting evidence and developing the programming skills needed to complete the work successfully.

Because in A-Level Computing, the project is not just about getting a program to run.

It is about learning how to think like a programmer, plan like a developer, test like an engineer and explain the journey clearly.

That is where the real learning happens.

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