11 June 2026

Taking Radioactivity Out of the Laboratory: What a Pocket Geiger Counter Can Teach Students


 

Taking Radioactivity Out of the Laboratory: What a Pocket Geiger Counter Can Teach Students

There was a time when a Geiger counter felt like a serious piece of laboratory equipment. It was large, expensive, often mains-powered, and usually lived on the physics bench next to a radioactive source locked away in a cupboard. Students might see it once or twice during a GCSE or A-Level lesson, hear the clicks, watch the count rate change, and then move on.

That was useful, but it also made radioactivity feel distant.

It was something that happened in a school laboratory. Something controlled. Something demonstrated. Something that belonged to exam questions, decay curves, half-life graphs and lead-lined boxes.

Modern portable radiation detectors have changed that.

A small device such as a Radiacode counter can be carried in a pocket, linked to a phone, and used almost anywhere. Suddenly, radioactivity is not just a topic in a textbook. It becomes something students can investigate in the real world.

And that changes the lesson completely.

From Bench Demonstration to Real-World Exploration

Traditional school radioactivity practicals are often limited. Quite rightly, radioactive sources are carefully controlled. A teacher may bring out an alpha, beta or gamma source, demonstrate shielding, distance and count rate, and then return everything safely to storage.

Students learn the key principles:

  • radiation is random;

  • count rate varies because of background radiation;

  • alpha, beta and gamma have different penetrating powers;

  • distance matters;

  • shielding matters;

  • radiation can be measured.

But the lesson can still feel artificial.

A portable detector opens up a much richer question:

Where do we actually find radiation in everyday life?

That question is much more powerful than simply asking students to copy down definitions.

With a portable counter, we can investigate rocks, buildings, old objects, granite worktops, smoke alarms, aircraft flights, beaches, soils and different environments. Students begin to realise that background radiation is not a single fixed number. It varies depending on where you are, what is around you, and even how high above the Earth you happen to be.

That is where physics becomes real.

The Croatia Flight Experiment

On my recent trip to Croatia, I took the Radiacode counter with me. This is the sort of thing that probably confirms to my family that I am incapable of going on holiday without turning part of it into a science lesson.

As the aircraft climbed, the count rate gradually increased.

At ground level, the detector showed ordinary background readings. As we climbed higher and higher, the numbers rose. By the time we reached cruising altitude, around 37,000 feet, the count rate had gone over 20 counts per second.



Then the alarm went off.

This was not because the aircraft had suddenly become dangerous. It was because the detector was doing exactly what it was designed to do: notice a higher radiation count than its normal everyday background setting.

The reason is beautifully simple.

At sea level, we live underneath a thick blanket of atmosphere. That atmosphere absorbs and reduces much of the cosmic radiation arriving from space. As an aircraft climbs, there is less atmosphere above it. Less shielding means a higher radiation count.

This is a wonderful teaching moment because it links several ideas together:

  • cosmic rays;

  • atmospheric shielding;

  • gamma radiation;

  • altitude;

  • measurement;

  • risk;

  • data logging;

  • real-world physics.

It also helps students understand that radiation is not automatically a panic word. It is something measurable, variable and explainable.



Why “The Alarm Went Off” Is Such a Good Lesson

Students often hear the word radiation and immediately think of danger, nuclear power stations, accidents or science fiction films. A detector alarm going off in an aircraft could sound alarming, but it is actually a superb opportunity to teach proportion.

Radiation detection is not the same as radiation danger.

A smoke alarm makes a noise when it detects smoke. That does not mean the house has already burned down. It means a threshold has been crossed. In the same way, a radiation detector alarm tells us that the count rate is above a set value. The next question is not “Should we panic?” but “Why has the reading changed?”

That is the scientific habit we want students to develop.

Not panic.
Not guess.
Not ignore it.
Measure, question, explain.

On the aircraft, the explanation was altitude. There was less atmosphere above us to absorb cosmic radiation. The count rose because the shielding from the atmosphere was reduced.

That is GCSE and A-Level physics in action, 37,000 feet above Europe.

The Phone App Changes Everything

The older style of Geiger counter gave a count rate and clicks. That was useful, but modern portable detectors go further.

Linked to a phone, the detector can record data, display graphs, map measurements and analyse the spectrum of the radiation. This means students are not just hearing clicks; they are collecting evidence.

That is a big educational shift.

Instead of saying:

“Here is a radioactive source. Watch the count rate.”

We can ask:

“What happens to the count rate as we move away?”
“What happens behind shielding?”
“Does every rock give the same reading?”
“Does the reading change outside?”
“What happens on a flight?”
“What does the spectrum suggest might be present?”

That moves the lesson from demonstration to investigation.

Students are no longer passive observers. They become scientific detectives.

Rocks, Minerals and the Surprise of Background Radiation

One of the most interesting uses of a portable counter is testing rocks and minerals.

Many students assume that a rock is just a rock. In reality, some rocks contain tiny amounts of naturally occurring radioactive materials. Granite, for example, can contain traces of uranium, thorium and potassium-40. These are not usually dangerous in ordinary everyday situations, but they can be detected.

That makes rocks a wonderful teaching resource.

A practical lesson might involve placing different rock samples at the same distance from the detector and recording the count rate over a fixed period of time. Students can then compare results, repeat measurements, calculate averages and discuss uncertainty.

The key teaching points are excellent:

  • background radiation varies;

  • natural materials can be slightly radioactive;

  • count rate needs repeated readings;

  • measurements fluctuate randomly;

  • fair testing matters;

  • data must be interpreted carefully.

This is far better than simply telling students that background radiation comes from rocks, space, food and buildings. They can actually test part of that claim for themselves.

The Smoke Detector in the Kitchen

Another powerful example is the ordinary smoke detector.

Some ionisation smoke alarms contain a very small radioactive source, usually americium-241. This source emits alpha radiation, which ionises air inside the detector. When smoke enters, it disrupts the ionisation current and triggers the alarm.

This is a superb teaching example because it links radioactivity to a familiar safety device.

Students often find this surprising. The idea that there may be a radioactive source in the kitchen sounds dramatic, but it is a good way to teach sensible risk. The source is small, sealed and designed for a specific purpose. The danger from a house fire is vastly greater than the risk from the sealed source inside a properly used smoke alarm.

With a detector, students can investigate count rate at different distances from the smoke alarm. They can see how rapidly readings change with distance and how radiation from a small source becomes much less significant as you move away.

This helps students understand one of the most important safety principles in radiation work:

Distance matters.

Distance, Time and Shielding

Radiation safety is often summarised using three ideas:

  • reduce time near the source;

  • increase distance from the source;

  • use suitable shielding.

A portable detector makes these ideas visible.

For example, a student can place a detector near a weak source and record a count rate. They can then move it twice as far away, then further again, and watch the count rate fall. The numbers will not be perfectly smooth because radioactive decay is random, but the overall pattern is clear.

This is a beautiful practical example because it links science, mathematics and safety.

Students can plot a graph.
They can discuss anomalies.
They can calculate averages.
They can compare predictions with real data.
They can see why standing further away from a source makes a difference.

That is much more memorable than simply writing “keep your distance” in an exercise book.

Radioactivity Is Random — And That Matters

One of the hardest ideas for students to understand is that radioactive decay is random.

A source may have a steady average count rate, but the clicks do not arrive in a perfectly regular rhythm. Sometimes there is a cluster of clicks. Sometimes there is a pause. This is not because the equipment is broken. It is because radioactive decay is a random process.

A portable counter makes this obvious.

Leave it running and students can see the count rate fluctuate. Take repeated readings of background radiation and the values are not identical. This leads naturally into discussions of:

  • uncertainty;

  • repeat measurements;

  • mean values;

  • statistical variation;

  • why scientists do not rely on a single reading.

This is an important lesson far beyond radioactivity. It teaches students how real measurement works.

In school science, students often expect perfect numbers. Real science rarely behaves like that.

Gamma Spectroscopy: From Clicks to Clues

The really exciting part of modern detectors is that some do more than count radiation. They can also analyse energy.

That means the detector may help identify what type of radioactive material is contributing to the reading. Instead of simply asking “How much radiation is there?”, students can begin to ask “What might be producing it?”

This is a much more advanced idea, but it is fascinating for older students.

At GCSE, it may be enough to say that different radioactive materials emit radiation with different energies.

At A-Level, this can lead into more detailed discussions of nuclear energy levels, gamma photons, spectra and isotope identification.

It turns a small pocket device into a doorway into nuclear physics.

Why This Matters for Teaching

The greatest benefit of portable radiation detectors is not the gadget itself. It is the change in how students experience the topic.

Radioactivity is often taught as something remote, dangerous and abstract. Students learn symbols, equations and safety rules, but they do not always develop a feel for what radiation actually means.

A portable counter helps change that.

It shows that radiation is measurable.
It shows that background radiation is always present.
It shows that readings vary.
It shows that altitude matters.
It shows that distance matters.
It shows that ordinary objects can become interesting scientific questions.

Most importantly, it shows students that science is not confined to the classroom.

The world becomes the laboratory.

Practical Lesson Ideas

1. Background Radiation Survey

Students measure the background count rate in different parts of a building or garden. They repeat each reading for the same length of time and calculate an average.

This teaches fair testing, repeat readings and natural variation.

2. Distance from a Smoke Alarm

Using a suitable ionisation smoke alarm, students measure how the count rate changes with distance. This must be done sensibly, without dismantling the alarm.

This teaches radiation safety, distance and real-world uses of radioactive sources.

3. Rocks and Minerals Investigation

Students compare different rock samples and record whether any produce a higher count rate than background.

This teaches natural radioactivity and the importance of careful interpretation.

4. Altitude and Cosmic Radiation

Data from a flight can be used to show how radiation increases with altitude. Students can plot count rate against altitude and explain the pattern.

This links radioactivity, atmosphere, space physics and data analysis.

5. Shielding Investigation

Using appropriate school-safe sources and teacher supervision, students compare the effect of paper, aluminium and lead shielding.

This reinforces alpha, beta and gamma penetration.

A Note on Safety

This sort of work must be done sensibly.

A radiation detector is a measuring device, not a toy. Radioactive sources should only be used under proper school safety rules. Smoke alarms should not be dismantled. Unknown objects with unusually high readings should not be handled casually. Students should be taught that measuring radiation does not mean taking risks with it.

That is another reason why these devices are useful.

They allow us to teach curiosity and caution together.

Good science is not reckless. It is careful, thoughtful and evidence-based.

From Fear to Understanding

One of the problems with teaching radioactivity is that students often arrive with fear before they arrive with understanding.

That is understandable. Radiation is invisible. It is associated with serious events. It cannot be detected directly by our senses.

But invisibility does not mean mystery.

A Geiger counter gives students a way to make the invisible measurable. The clicks, graphs and spectra turn an abstract idea into evidence.

Once students can measure something, they can begin to understand it.

That is the heart of science teaching.

Personal Reflection

For me, the most exciting part of carrying a portable detector is that it makes science spontaneous.

A flight becomes a cosmic radiation experiment.
A rock becomes a geological investigation.
A smoke detector becomes a lesson in ionisation.
A walk outside becomes a background radiation survey.
A phone screen becomes a data logger.

That is exactly the kind of science I want students to experience.

Not just science as a set of facts to memorise.
Not just science as a list of required practicals.
Not just science as exam technique.

Science as curiosity.
Science as measurement.
Science as asking, “I wonder what happens if…”

Conclusion: The World Is Full of Lessons

The move from large bench-top Geiger counters to pocket-sized radiation detectors is more than a technological improvement. It changes what is possible in the classroom.

It allows students to see that radioactivity is not just a chapter in a physics textbook. It is part of the natural world. It is in the atmosphere, in rocks, in some household devices, in the structure of the Earth and in the cosmic radiation arriving from space.

Used well, a portable detector does something very powerful.

It takes radioactivity off the laboratory bench and places it back into the real world.

And once students realise that the real world can be measured, questioned and investigated, they begin to see science differently.

That is when learning becomes discovery.


10 June 2026

What Is the Difference Between Sums and Maths?

 


What Is the Difference Between Sums and Maths?

There is a moment in many maths lessons when a student looks completely confident.

They can rearrange a formula.
They can substitute numbers.
They can draw a graph.
They can calculate a gradient.
They can solve a quadratic equation when it is written neatly on the page.

Then the same mathematics appears inside a worded problem, a practical situation, or an unfamiliar exam question — and everything stops.

The student says:

“I don’t know what to do.”

Not because they cannot do the calculation.
Not because they have never seen the formula.
Not because they are lazy or careless.

Often, the difficulty is that they cannot yet find the mathematics hidden inside the problem.

And this raises a much bigger question.

What is maths?

Is maths doing sums?
Is it remembering methods?
Is it rearranging formulae?
Is it drawing graphs?
Or is maths really about solving puzzles, spotting patterns, making models and deciding which tools to use?

The answer, of course, is that it is all of these things — but they are not the same skill.

Sums Are Usually About Procedure

A “sum” usually has a clear instruction.

Calculate this.
Expand this bracket.
Solve this equation.
Rearrange this formula.
Plot this graph.
Find the mean.
Differentiate this expression.

The student knows what type of question it is because the question tells them.

For example:

Rearrange ( v = u + at ) to make ( t ) the subject.

That is a procedural task. The student has to know how to move symbols around correctly.

Or:

Calculate the gradient of the line passing through the points (2, 5) and (6, 13).

Again, the method is clear. Use the gradient formula. Substitute the numbers. Calculate the answer.

These skills matter. They are not unimportant. Students need fluency. They need accuracy. They need confidence with number, algebra, units, graphs and formulae.

But being able to carry out a method is not quite the same as knowing when to use it.

That is where many students struggle.

Maths Is Often About Deciding What the Problem Is Really Asking

In real mathematical thinking, the first challenge is not always the calculation.

The first challenge is often this:

What is going on here?

A worded problem may not say “use Pythagoras” or “calculate the gradient” or “use simultaneous equations”. The student has to recognise the structure for themselves.

For example:

A ladder is leaning against a wall. The foot of the ladder is 1.5 m from the wall and the ladder is 4 m long. How high up the wall does the ladder reach?

This is not labelled as Pythagoras, but that is what it is.

The student has to realise that the wall, floor and ladder form a right-angled triangle. Only then does the calculation become possible.

Another example:

A mobile phone company charges a £12 monthly fee plus 8p per minute. Another company charges no monthly fee but 20p per minute. After how many minutes would the two companies cost the same?

This is not just arithmetic. It is modelling. It is about turning a real situation into equations.

Company A: fixed cost plus variable cost.
Company B: variable cost only.
Then the student needs to compare the two.

The actual algebra may be fairly simple. The hard part is seeing that algebra is needed at all.

The Hidden Skill: Translating Words Into Mathematics

This is the skill that often separates students who can “do sums” from students who can “do maths”.

They need to translate.

Words become numbers.
Situations become diagrams.
Descriptions become equations.
Graphs become stories.
Units become clues.
Constraints become boundaries.

A student might be perfectly able to rearrange:

speed = distance ÷ time

But in a physics question, the same idea might appear like this:

A cyclist travels 1.2 km in 4 minutes. Calculate the average speed in metres per second.

Now the student has several decisions to make.

They must identify that this is a speed question.
They must convert kilometres to metres.
They must convert minutes to seconds.
They must choose the correct formula.
They must substitute the numbers.
They must check that the final unit is metres per second.

The calculation itself is not too hard. But the thinking around the calculation is much richer.

That is why students can sometimes say, “I know the formula, but I don’t know how to start.”

Worded Problems Are Not Just Reading Tests

It is tempting to say that students struggle with worded problems because they cannot read properly.

Sometimes reading is part of the issue. Students may skim the question, miss a key word, ignore a unit, or fail to notice that the answer is required in a particular form.

But the problem is deeper than literacy.

Many students read the words but do not know how to organise the information.

A good problem solver does not simply read a question from beginning to end and hope the answer appears. They actively process it.

They ask:

What information have I been given?
What am I being asked to find?
What topic does this connect to?
Can I draw a diagram?
Can I write an equation?
Are the units consistent?
Is there a hidden relationship?
Does the answer make sense?

This is why I often encourage students to slow down before they calculate.

In exams, many students rush to write something because they feel that writing nothing looks bad. But a few seconds spent understanding the problem can save several minutes of confused working.

Puzzle Solving and Maths Are Related — But Not Identical

I sometimes wonder whether maths is really puzzle solving.

There is certainly a strong connection.

A good maths problem often feels like a puzzle. You have clues. You have restrictions. You have missing information. You need a route through.

But puzzle solving on its own is not the same as maths.

A puzzle may rely on pattern spotting, trial and error, lateral thinking or a clever trick. Mathematics uses some of those skills, but it also requires a formal language.

Maths gives us tools:

Algebra.
Geometry.
Graphs.
Probability.
Calculus.
Units.
Ratios.
Functions.
Statistics.
Vectors.
Models.

The art of mathematics is not simply owning the tools. It is knowing which tool to pick up.

A student may have a full toolbox but still not know whether the problem needs a screwdriver, a spanner or a saw.

That is often what happens in maths.

They know many methods, but they do not yet recognise when each method is useful.

Why Students Freeze When the Question Looks Different

Students often learn mathematics in neat chapters.

This week: expanding brackets.
Next week: factorising.
Then: straight-line graphs.
Then: simultaneous equations.
Then: trigonometry.

In the lesson, the topic is obvious. On the worksheet, the title gives the game away.

If the worksheet is called “Pythagoras’ Theorem”, the student knows what to do before reading the first question.

But exam papers do not always behave like worksheets.

An exam question may combine topics. It may hide the method. It may use a real-world context. It may require two or three steps. It may give extra information that is not needed.

This is why students sometimes perform well in class practice but struggle in mixed revision papers.

The problem is not always that they have forgotten the content. It may be that they have not yet practised choosing the content.

The Difference Between “Can Do” and “Can Apply”

There is a very important distinction in teaching:

Can the student do the method?
Can the student apply the method?

These are not the same.

A student may be able to calculate percentages:

Find 15% of £80.

But then struggle with:

A coat is reduced by 15% in a sale and now costs £68. What was the original price?

Both involve percentages, but the second question requires more thinking. It is a reverse percentage problem. The student has to recognise that £68 represents 85% of the original amount.

This is why exam boards increasingly test application. They want to know whether students understand the mathematics, not just whether they can imitate a method.

For students, this can feel unfair.

They may say:

“We were never taught this question.”

But often they were taught the mathematics. What they have not yet mastered is recognising the mathematics in a new disguise.

Practical Ways to Help Students Find the Maths

One of the most useful things a teacher or tutor can do is make the invisible thinking visible.

Instead of only showing the calculation, we need to show the decision-making.

1. Ask: What Topic Is Hiding Here?

Before solving, ask the student to identify the topic.

Is this ratio?
Is this speed?
Is this area?
Is this simultaneous equations?
Is this a gradient problem?
Is this proportionality?
Is this trigonometry?

This helps students build recognition.

2. Draw a Diagram

Many students avoid diagrams because they think diagrams are for students who cannot do the problem in their head.

That is the wrong way round.

Good mathematicians draw diagrams because diagrams reduce mental load.

A triangle, a number line, a graph, a table or a simple sketch can turn a confusing paragraph into something manageable.

3. Highlight the Command Word

Calculate.
Show.
Explain.
Estimate.
Prove.
Compare.
Hence.

These words matter. They tell the student what sort of answer is expected.

4. Separate the Information

A good habit is to list:

Given information.
Unknown quantity.
Formula or relationship.
Units.
Final answer required.

This turns a messy problem into a structured one.

5. Estimate Before Calculating

Students should ask: roughly what should the answer be?

If a calculated speed for a cyclist is 300 metres per second, something has gone wrong. If a probability is bigger than 1, something has gone wrong. If a length is negative, something has probably gone wrong.

Estimation helps students become judges of their own answers.

6. Practise Mixed Questions

Students need topic practice, but they also need mixed practice.

Topic practice builds fluency.
Mixed practice builds choice.

A student who only practises questions labelled by topic may become dependent on the label. Mixed practice removes the signpost and forces the student to decide.

A Classroom Example: Graphs Without Understanding

Graphs are a good example of the difference between procedure and understanding.

Many students can draw a graph if given a table of values. They can plot points accurately. They can join them with a line or curve.

But if asked what the graph means, they may struggle.

In science, this becomes very important.

A distance-time graph is not just a drawing. The gradient represents speed.
A velocity-time graph is not just a line. The area underneath represents distance travelled.
A current-voltage graph tells us something about resistance.
A cooling curve tells us about energy transfer and changes of state.

The mathematics is not finished when the graph is drawn.

The real question is:

What does the graph tell us?

That is maths as interpretation, not just maths as plotting.

Why This Matters Beyond Exams

This issue matters because real life rarely presents problems in textbook form.

Nobody says:

“Please use simultaneous equations to compare these phone contracts.”

They say:

“Which deal is better?”

Nobody says:

“Please calculate a percentage increase.”

They say:

“Has this bill gone up by more than inflation?”

Nobody says:

“Please use a linear model.”

They say:

“If this trend continues, what happens next?”

Mathematics is a way of making better decisions. It helps us compare, predict, measure, estimate, design and test ideas.

That is why students need more than calculation. They need mathematical judgement.

The Tutor’s Role: Building Confidence in the Unknown

As a tutor, I often see students who are much better at maths than they think they are.

They can do the individual skills. What they lack is confidence when the question is unfamiliar.

So part of the job is not simply teaching another formula. It is helping them develop a method for approaching the unknown.

I often say to students:

Do not panic because you cannot see the whole route immediately.
Start by finding one piece of structure.
Write down what you know.
Draw something.
Look for a relationship.
Try a simpler version.
Check the units.
Ask what topic the question resembles.

Problem solving is not magic. It is a habit that can be taught.

So, What Is Maths?

Maths is not just sums.

Sums are part of maths, but they are not the whole subject.

Maths is calculation, but it is also interpretation.
It is accuracy, but it is also judgement.
It is formulae, but it is also modelling.
It is graphs, but it is also meaning.
It is procedure, but it is also problem solving.

Students need to learn the methods, but they also need to learn how to choose the methods.

That is the step many students find difficult — and it is one of the most important steps in becoming a confident mathematician.

Conclusion: The Real Skill Is Finding the Maths

When a student says, “I can do it when you show me, but I can’t do it in the question,” they are describing a very real problem.

They do not just need more sums.

They need help finding the maths.

They need to practise turning words into diagrams, diagrams into equations, equations into answers, and answers back into meaning.

That is where the real learning happens.

Because mathematics is not simply about getting through a page of calculations.

It is about looking at a problem, however messy or unfamiliar, and thinking:

“What do I know? What can I use? What does this situation really mean?”

That is when sums become maths.

09 June 2026

Why Are So Few Girls Choosing A-Level Physics?

 


Why Are So Few Girls Choosing A-Level Physics?

The Empty Seats in the Physics Classroom

When I look around an A-Level Biology class, there are usually plenty of girls. In many schools, Biology feels balanced, lively and full of students who can imagine themselves going on to medicine, dentistry, veterinary science, nursing, biomedical science, psychology, environmental science or research.

Then I look around an A-Level Physics class.

Sometimes there are a few girls. Sometimes there is one. Sometimes there are none at all.

This is not just something I have noticed as a teacher. Many physics teachers, tutors, parents and students notice the same thing. The question is not whether girls can do physics. They absolutely can. The more important question is this:

What happens between GCSE Science and A-Level choices that makes so many capable girls decide that physics is not for them?

It is a troubling question because physics opens doors. It supports careers in engineering, medicine, architecture, energy, climate science, computing, materials science, space technology, acoustics, robotics, finance, data science and research. Yet too many girls never get as far as considering those doors because they quietly rule themselves out before they even apply.

It Is Not About Ability

The first myth to remove is the idea that girls are somehow less suited to physics. That is nonsense.

Girls succeed in GCSE Science. Girls succeed in mathematics. Girls succeed in A-Level Chemistry and Biology. Girls go on to demanding university courses that require precision, memory, analysis, problem-solving and resilience.

So the issue is not ability.

The problem is more subtle. Physics has somehow acquired an identity problem. Many students do not simply ask, “Am I good enough for physics?” They ask, often without saying it aloud:

“Am I the sort of person who does physics?”

For too many girls, the answer society has given them is no.

The Stereotype Problem Starts Early

By the time students choose their A-Levels, many of their ideas about subjects have already been formed.

Physics is often presented, directly or indirectly, as a subject for boys who like rockets, cars, computers, electronics, engines and difficult equations. Of course, many girls like those things too, and many boys do not. But stereotypes are powerful precisely because they work quietly.

A student may never hear anyone say, “Physics is not for girls.” But she may still absorb the message through:

  • toys marketed differently to boys and girls

  • television and film showing male scientists and engineers more often

  • family comments about “boys being good at technical things”

  • jokes about physics being “for geniuses”

  • a lack of visible female physicists in school displays and textbooks

  • a classroom culture where boys dominate practical equipment or shout out answers

  • careers advice that presents Biology as caring and Physics as mechanical

None of these things alone explains the problem. Together, they create a background atmosphere.

A girl may enjoy science, get good marks, and still feel that physics belongs to someone else.

Biology Feels Human. Physics Can Feel Distant.

One reason Biology attracts many more girls may be that its human relevance is obvious.

Students can immediately see links to health, disease, the body, genetics, ecology, animals, sport, nutrition and medicine. Biology is full of stories about living things. It connects naturally to people.

Physics is just as relevant, but that relevance is not always made visible.

Physics explains:

  • how ultrasound scans create images of unborn babies

  • how MRI scanners work

  • how radiotherapy targets tumours

  • how solar panels generate electricity

  • how electric cars store and use energy

  • how satellites track climate change

  • how smartphones communicate

  • how musical instruments produce sound

  • how buildings stand up

  • how sailing boats use forces, wind and water to move

The problem is not that physics lacks real-world meaning. The problem is that students are not always shown enough of that meaning early enough.

If physics is presented only as equations, circuits, mechanics and abstract diagrams, some students decide it is cold, dry and disconnected from life. That is a failure of presentation, not of the subject itself.

The Confidence Gap

Another issue I often see in teaching is confidence.

Some students need to feel almost completely secure before they will put themselves forward. Others are happier to have a go, make a mess, get it wrong and try again.

Physics rewards persistence. It also exposes mistakes quickly. If a student rearranges an equation incorrectly, forgets a unit, misreads a graph or chooses the wrong formula, the answer may collapse. That can make physics feel unforgiving.

A confident student may say, “I got that wrong. Let me try again.”

A less confident student may say, “I am not a physics person.”

This matters because subject choice is emotional as well as academic. Students do not only choose subjects based on grades. They choose subjects based on how those subjects make them feel.

If a girl has spent years being praised for neatness, accuracy and getting things right first time, physics can feel risky. It requires uncertainty, trial and error, rough diagrams, false starts and perseverance. We need to teach students that this is normal.

Getting stuck in physics is not evidence of failure. It is part of the process.

The Role of GCSE Teaching

It would be too simple to blame GCSE teaching. Many GCSE science teachers work extremely hard, often with limited time, large classes, pressure from exams and shortages of specialist teachers.

However, good teaching can make a difference.

A strong GCSE Physics teacher can help students see that physics is not just about memorising equations. It is about modelling the world. It is about asking:

  • Why does the object move?

  • Where is the energy going?

  • What force is acting?

  • What pattern does the graph show?

  • How can we test this?

  • What does the result actually mean?

When students experience physics as investigation rather than intimidation, they are more likely to consider continuing.

Practical work is especially important. A student who has built circuits, measured motion, investigated waves, used sensors, seen magnetic fields, explored radiation safely, or watched real-time data appear on a graph has a different relationship with the subject. Physics becomes something they do, not just something they read about.

In my own teaching, I have seen how much difference live experiments can make. A student who looks blankly at a formula may suddenly understand when they see a trolley accelerate, a wire heat up, a diffraction pattern appear, or a force sensor produce a graph. The subject comes alive.

Classroom Culture Matters

Sometimes the barrier is not the syllabus but the atmosphere.

In some mixed classrooms, boys may be quicker to grab equipment, answer loudly, dominate group work or take over practical tasks. They may not mean to exclude anyone. But the result can still be exclusion.

If girls spend practical lessons writing down results while boys handle the equipment, they may leave with less confidence. If boys are treated as naturally technical while girls are treated as careful note-takers, the message is absorbed.

Teachers need to be alert to this.

Good physics teaching should make sure that every student:

  • handles apparatus

  • makes measurements

  • explains results

  • draws diagrams

  • uses equations

  • leads part of the investigation

  • makes mistakes without embarrassment

  • sees themselves as capable

This is not about lowering standards. It is about widening access to high standards.

Role Models Are Not a Decorative Extra

Role models matter because students need examples of possible futures.

When girls see women working in physics, engineering, instrumentation, research, education, design and technology, the subject becomes more imaginable.

People such as Dr Nicola Swann at Lascells provide powerful examples because they show physics as practical, creative, technical and useful. This is not physics hidden away in a textbook. It is physics turned into equipment, experiments and learning tools. That matters.

Role models do not need to be celebrity scientists. They can be:

  • teachers

  • engineers

  • laboratory technicians

  • medical physicists

  • product designers

  • science communicators

  • researchers

  • former students

  • local business owners

  • women working in technical industries

The key is visibility. Students cannot aspire to what they never see.

Parents and Subject Choices

Parents also play a quiet but important role.

Many parents want to support their children but may unintentionally reinforce stereotypes. A parent might say:

“Physics is very hard.”

“You have to be brilliant at maths.”

“Biology gives you more options.”

“Are there many girls in the class?”

“Wouldn’t Chemistry be more useful?”

Each comment may be well meant. But together they can make a student cautious.

A better conversation might be:

“What parts of science do you enjoy?”

“Do you like solving problems?”

“Would you enjoy understanding how things work?”

“Have you looked at where physics can lead?”

“Would you like to speak to someone who teaches it or uses it?”

Parents do not need to push girls into physics. They simply need to avoid quietly pushing them away from it.

The Maths Barrier

Physics and mathematics are closely linked, and this can be both a strength and a barrier.

Many girls who could succeed in physics do not choose it because they worry about the maths. Sometimes they are perfectly capable, but they lack confidence. Sometimes they enjoy science but dislike the way physics questions require algebra, rearranging formulae and interpreting graphs.

This is where early support matters.

Students need to see that the mathematics in physics is not there to frighten them. It is a language for describing the world. A graph is not just a graph; it tells a story. An equation is not just a set of symbols; it links quantities together. Rearranging a formula is not a trick; it is a way of asking a different question.

If students are taught the mathematical tools gradually and clearly, physics becomes much less intimidating.

Why This Matters Beyond School

The gender gap in physics matters because physics feeds into many important careers.

We need physicists and engineers working on:

  • renewable energy

  • medical imaging

  • climate monitoring

  • transport systems

  • artificial intelligence hardware

  • telecommunications

  • materials science

  • robotics

  • sustainable buildings

  • battery technology

  • water systems

  • space science

If girls are underrepresented in physics, they are also underrepresented in shaping these areas.

That is not just unfair to individual students. It is a loss for society.

Different people bring different questions, experiences and priorities. A more diverse physics community is likely to ask better questions and design better solutions.

What Schools Can Do

Schools cannot fix society alone, but they can make a real difference.

They can:

  • challenge stereotypes early

  • display diverse scientists and engineers

  • make physics visibly connected to real life

  • ensure girls handle equipment in practical work

  • offer physics taster sessions before A-Level choices

  • invite female physicists, engineers and technicians to speak

  • link physics to medicine, environment, music, sport, sailing, photography and technology

  • give students more experience with problem-solving before A-Level

  • make careers information specific rather than vague

  • encourage capable students personally

That last point matters. Sometimes a student needs to hear:

“You are good at this. You should seriously consider physics.”

A general assembly about STEM is useful. A personal word from a teacher can be life-changing.

What Tutors Can Do

As tutors, we also have a responsibility.

When I teach physics, I try to make it practical, visual and connected. I want students to see that physics is not simply a set of equations to survive for an exam. It is a way of understanding the world.

That might mean using sensors to collect data, filming motion, investigating circuits, using a thermal camera, modelling waves, looking at forces on a sailing boat, or connecting electricity to the fields around wires rather than pretending it is simply something that “flows through” a cable.

Students need to experience the subject as something rich and powerful.

For girls who are unsure, the aim is not to give false confidence. It is to build real confidence through understanding.

What Students Should Know

If you are a student considering A-Level Physics, especially if you are one of only a few girls in your year thinking about it, here is the truth:

You do not need to be perfect before you begin.

You need curiosity. You need a willingness to practise. You need to be prepared to get things wrong and try again. You need to work steadily at the maths. You need to ask questions.

Physics is challenging, but so are Biology, Chemistry, Maths, History, English Literature and every serious A-Level. Difficulty is not a reason to avoid a subject if it interests you.

Do not ask only, “Will I find this hard?”

Ask, “Would this be worth learning?”

Conclusion: Physics Must Feel Like It Belongs to Everyone

The lack of girls in A-Level Physics is not caused by one thing. It is not simply bad teaching, poor confidence, weak careers advice, stereotypes, lack of role models or fear of maths. It is all of these things interacting over many years.

The good news is that none of these barriers is inevitable.

Girls can do physics. Girls do succeed in physics. Girls belong in physics classrooms, university laboratories, engineering companies, research teams, medical physics departments, energy projects and technology businesses.

But belonging does not happen by accident. It has to be built.

It is built when teachers notice who is holding the equipment. It is built when parents talk about physics as a real option. It is built when schools show female physicists as normal, not exceptional. It is built when students see physics connected to health, climate, music, sport, sailing, technology and everyday life.

Most of all, it is built when a girl looks around a physics classroom and does not feel like a visitor.

She should feel that physics is hers too.

Reference In 2025, girls made up only 24.1% of A-Level Physics candidates, even though more than 10,000 girls took the subject for the second year running. Physics remains one of the most gender-imbalanced A-Levels. (Institute of Physics), IOP

08 June 2026

The Pros and Cons of Choosing A Level Biology

 


The Pros and Cons of Choosing A Level Biology

Every year, around this time, students begin making one of the most important academic choices of their school career: which A Levels should I take?

For many students, A Level Biology seems like an obvious choice. They enjoyed GCSE Biology, they like learning about the human body, they are interested in medicine, animals, sport, health, the environment or psychology, and Biology appears to keep lots of university doors open.

And that is true.

A Level Biology can be a very useful, respected and flexible subject. It can support applications for medicine, dentistry, veterinary science, physiotherapy, nursing, biomedical science, pharmacy, psychology, environmental science, genetics, neuroscience and many other courses.

But there is a problem.

Many students choose A Level Biology without fully understanding how difficult it is.

Biology is not just “the science with fewer calculations”. It is not simply a matter of learning a few diagrams of cells, plants and organs. At A Level, Biology becomes a large, detailed, demanding subject where students must learn a huge amount of content and then apply it accurately to unfamiliar exam questions.

In short, A Level Biology offers great opportunities — but it is not an easy option.


Why Students Choose A Level Biology

There are many good reasons for choosing Biology.

Some students are fascinated by the human body. They want to understand how the heart works, how nerves transmit impulses, how muscles contract, how hormones control the body, or how disease affects cells and tissues.

Others are interested in the natural world. They enjoy ecology, evolution, classification, biodiversity and conservation.

Some students choose Biology because they are considering a career in healthcare. Medicine, dentistry, veterinary science, nursing, physiotherapy, radiography, pharmacy and biomedical science all have strong links to Biology.

Others choose it because it combines well with other subjects.

Biology works particularly well with:

  • Chemistry

  • Psychology

  • Maths

  • PE

  • Geography

  • Physics

  • Sociology

This makes it attractive to students who are not yet completely sure what they want to do at university.

That flexibility is one of Biology’s biggest strengths.


The Big Advantage: Biology Opens Doors

A Level Biology is a strong academic subject. Universities recognise that it requires commitment, accuracy, memory, analysis and scientific understanding.

For students interested in life sciences, healthcare or environmental subjects, Biology can be extremely valuable.

It can lead towards courses such as:

  • Medicine

  • Dentistry

  • Veterinary science

  • Biomedical science

  • Biochemistry

  • Pharmacy

  • Physiotherapy

  • Nursing

  • Midwifery

  • Neuroscience

  • Psychology

  • Sports and exercise science

  • Environmental science

  • Marine biology

  • Genetics

  • Nutrition

  • Zoology

It also helps students develop useful skills: interpreting data, evaluating experiments, understanding systems, writing precise explanations and applying knowledge to real-world contexts.

A student who enjoys Biology and is prepared to work hard can gain a lot from the subject.


The Hidden Difficulty: There Is a Huge Amount to Learn

The main shock for many students is the quantity of content.

GCSE Biology already contains quite a lot: cells, organisation, infection, bioenergetics, homeostasis, inheritance and ecology.

At A Level, each of those ideas becomes deeper, more detailed and more connected.

Students are expected to know about:

  • Biological molecules

  • Cell structure

  • Enzymes

  • DNA and protein synthesis

  • Cell division

  • Exchange surfaces

  • Transport in animals and plants

  • Immunity

  • Gas exchange

  • Photosynthesis

  • Respiration

  • Nerves and synapses

  • Muscles

  • Hormones

  • Kidneys

  • Genetics

  • Evolution

  • Ecosystems

  • Populations

  • Gene technology

  • Statistical tests

  • Required practicals

That is a lot of information.

And the challenge is not just learning the facts. Students must learn the facts precisely.

In Biology, one missing word can change the meaning of an answer.

For example, a GCSE answer might say:

“Enzymes break down food.”

At A Level, that is nowhere near enough. A student may need to explain active sites, substrates, enzyme-substrate complexes, activation energy, tertiary structure, induced fit, denaturation and the effect of temperature or pH on hydrogen bonds and ionic bonds.

That is a big step up.


Biology Is Not Just Memory — It Is Application

Many students think Biology is mainly about memorising notes.

Memory is certainly important, but it is not enough.

The exam questions often test whether students can apply their knowledge to new situations. They may be given an unfamiliar experiment, a strange graph, a disease they have never studied, or a data table from a real biological investigation.

Then they are expected to use their knowledge logically.

This is where many students struggle.

They may know the topic, but they do not answer the question being asked. They write everything they remember about enzymes, immunity or respiration, but the mark scheme wants a very specific explanation linked to the data in the question.

A Level Biology rewards students who can:

  • Read questions very carefully

  • Use correct biological vocabulary

  • Link cause and effect

  • Interpret graphs and tables

  • Apply known ideas to unfamiliar examples

  • Explain practical methods

  • Evaluate reliability and validity

  • Write clearly and precisely

It is not enough to “sort of understand it”. The exam requires detailed, accurate, applied understanding.


The Problem With “I Like Biology at GCSE”

Enjoying GCSE Biology is a good sign, but it does not guarantee that A Level Biology will feel the same.

At GCSE, many students do well by learning the revision guide, memorising key points and practising common question types.

At A Level, the subject becomes more abstract and more detailed.

For example:

At GCSE, students learn that respiration releases energy.

At A Level, they learn glycolysis, the link reaction, the Krebs cycle, oxidative phosphorylation, reduced NAD, reduced FAD, ATP synthase, electron transport chains and chemiosmosis.

At GCSE, students learn that DNA carries genetic information.

At A Level, they learn transcription, translation, mRNA, tRNA, ribosomes, codons, anticodons, peptide bonds, introns, exons and gene expression.

At GCSE, students learn that the kidneys remove waste.

At A Level, they learn ultrafiltration, selective reabsorption, osmoregulation, ADH, collecting ducts, water potential and negative feedback.

This is why some students are surprised. They thought they had chosen a subject about animals, health and the body. Instead, they find themselves learning biochemical pathways, molecular genetics and statistical analysis.

That does not mean they made the wrong choice. It just means they need to understand what they are taking on.


The Practical Side of Biology

One of the best parts of Biology is that it is a practical science.

Good Biology teaching should not just be a folder full of notes. Students should be seeing cells under microscopes, investigating enzymes, measuring osmosis, studying plant tissues, testing biological molecules and analysing real data.

The required practicals are an important part of the course. They are also a common source of exam questions.

Students need to understand:

  • What was changed

  • What was measured

  • What was controlled

  • Why repeats are needed

  • How errors affect results

  • How to improve reliability

  • How to calculate means

  • How to process data

  • How to evaluate conclusions

This is an area where students often underestimate the subject. They remember the result of a practical but do not understand the method deeply enough to answer exam questions about it.

In my own teaching, I find practical work extremely useful because it makes the subject real. Looking at stomata under a microscope, modelling the gut, testing food samples, measuring osmosis or investigating enzymes can turn Biology from a list of facts into something students can actually see and understand.

That matters.

When students understand the practical basis of Biology, they are much better prepared for the exam.


The Pros of Choosing A Level Biology

There are many strong reasons to take Biology.

1. It keeps many university options open

For students interested in healthcare, life sciences or environmental subjects, Biology is often essential or strongly recommended.

2. It is genuinely interesting

Biology explains life: how organisms work, how disease spreads, how cells communicate, how evolution happens and how ecosystems function.

3. It links to real-world issues

Biology connects to medicine, climate change, genetics, food production, conservation, pandemics, fertility treatment, antibiotic resistance and biotechnology.

4. It develops useful thinking skills

Students learn to interpret data, evaluate evidence, understand complex systems and explain processes logically.

5. It combines well with many subjects

Biology works well with Chemistry, Maths, Psychology, PE, Geography and other sciences.

6. It can support many career routes

Even students who do not become doctors or vets may use Biology in careers linked to healthcare, research, education, sport, nutrition, environmental management or laboratory science.


The Cons of Choosing A Level Biology

However, students should be honest about the difficulties.

1. There is a lot to memorise

Biology is content-heavy. Students need regular revision from the start, not just before the exams.

2. The mark schemes are very specific

Students can understand the topic but still lose marks because their wording is too vague.

3. The questions can be unpredictable

Exams often use unfamiliar contexts. Students must apply knowledge rather than simply repeat notes.

4. Practical skills matter

Required practicals, data handling and experimental evaluation are a major part of success.

5. There is more maths than some students expect

Biology includes percentages, ratios, rates, standard deviation, statistical tests, graphs, magnification calculations and data interpretation.

6. It can feel overwhelming

Because the content is so broad, students who fall behind may find it difficult to catch up without a clear plan.


What About Sports Science?

Some students who enjoy Biology, PE or sport consider Sports Science instead.

Sports Science can be a good course for the right student, especially if they are genuinely interested in exercise physiology, biomechanics, coaching, performance analysis, rehabilitation, nutrition or sport psychology.

However, students should be careful.

Sports Science is not usually the same as choosing a more traditional science route. It may not keep as many doors open as Biology, Chemistry or Maths, depending on the university course and career path the student later wants.

For example, a student considering medicine, dentistry, veterinary science, pharmacy or biomedical science would usually be much better served by traditional science A Levels, especially Biology and Chemistry.

Sports Science may be useful for careers linked to coaching, exercise science, strength and conditioning, physiotherapy support routes, sport development or fitness industries, but students should check university entry requirements carefully before assuming it will lead to the same opportunities.

The key point is this:

Sports Science is not automatically a bad choice. But it is a more specialised choice.

Biology keeps more academic and university options open. Sports Science may suit a student with a clear interest in sport-related careers, but it should not be chosen simply because it looks easier.

In fact, no A Level should be chosen just because it looks easy.


Who Should Choose A Level Biology?

A Level Biology is a good choice for students who:

  • Enjoy learning how living organisms work

  • Are prepared to revise regularly

  • Can cope with a large amount of content

  • Are willing to use precise scientific language

  • Like practical work and data analysis

  • Are interested in healthcare, life sciences or the environment

  • Are prepared to practise exam questions properly

It is probably not the best choice for students who:

  • Dislike memorising detailed information

  • Do not enjoy reading and writing explanations

  • Want a subject with very little independent study

  • Avoid graphs, tables and calculations

  • Think Biology is just “the easy science”

  • Only liked GCSE Biology because it seemed less mathematical than Physics or Chemistry

That does not mean a student must be perfect before starting. A Level is meant to be challenging. But students should begin with their eyes open.


How to Succeed in A Level Biology

The students who do best usually develop good habits early.

1. Revise little and often

Biology cannot be crammed successfully at the last minute. The content needs repeated revisiting.

2. Learn key vocabulary precisely

Words such as diffusion, active transport, hydrolysis, condensation, phosphorylation, immunity, transcription and selection must be used accurately.

3. Practise exam questions from the start

Reading notes is not enough. Students need to learn how exam boards ask questions and how mark schemes award marks.

4. Make links between topics

Biology is highly connected. Respiration links to muscles. DNA links to protein synthesis. Cell membranes link to transport, nerves and immunity.

5. Understand the practicals

Students should know the method, variables, controls, risks, errors and improvements for each required practical.

6. Do not ignore the maths

Magnification, percentages, rates, graphs and statistics appear regularly. Students who avoid the maths lose marks unnecessarily.

7. Ask for help early

Because Biology is cumulative, small gaps can grow quickly. It is much easier to fix confusion early than to repair a year’s worth of weak understanding before the final exams.


A Personal Reflection From Teaching Biology

After many years of teaching science, I have seen many students choose Biology with great enthusiasm. Some thrive. They love the detail, the connections, the practicals and the way the subject explains the living world.

Others are shocked by the workload.

The difference is rarely intelligence alone. It is usually preparation, organisation and consistency.

The successful students do not simply highlight notes and hope for the best. They test themselves. They practise questions. They learn definitions. They correct mistakes. They revisit old topics. They learn how to write answers that match the level required.

Biology rewards steady work.

It is a subject where a student can improve enormously, but only if they treat it seriously from the beginning.


Final Thought: Biology Is a Powerful Choice, But Not an Easy One

A Level Biology is one of the most rewarding subjects a student can choose. It explains life from molecules to ecosystems, from DNA to disease, from cells to human behaviour.

It can open doors to exciting university courses and careers.

But it is also a demanding A Level. There is a great deal to learn, the exam questions can be challenging, and success depends on precision, application and regular practice.

Students should not choose Biology because it sounds interesting but easy.

They should choose it because they are interested enough to work hard.

That is the real test.

If a student enjoys Biology, is prepared to revise consistently, and wants to keep strong science-related options open, A Level Biology can be an excellent choice.

But they should begin with a clear understanding:

Biology is fascinating.
Biology is useful.
Biology is demanding.

And for the right student, that is exactly what makes it worth doing.


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