07 March 2026

Computing – How Do Networks Work?


 Computing – How Do Networks Work?

Almost everything we do with a computer today involves a network. Sending an email, watching a YouTube video, uploading a TikTok clip, or joining a Zoom lesson all depend on computers talking to each other through networks. But how do networks actually work?

For GCSE and A-Level computing students, understanding networks means understanding how devices communicate, share data, and access resources.


What Is a Computer Network?

A computer network is simply a group of devices connected together so they can communicate and share information.

These devices may include:

  • Computers

  • Phones and tablets

  • Printers

  • Servers

  • Cameras and smart devices

In your home you probably already have a small network: your router connects all your devices to each other and to the internet.

At Hemel Private Tuition we even run a network in the studio and laboratory so cameras, computers, sensors, and streaming equipment can all share data during online lessons.


The Main Parts of a Network

Most networks contain several key components.

1. Devices (Nodes)

Every device connected to the network is called a node.

Examples include:

  • laptops

  • phones

  • smart TVs

  • printers

  • servers

Each device has a network interface card (NIC) which allows it to connect to the network.


2. Routers

A router connects different networks together.

Your home router:

  • connects your home network to the internet

  • sends data to the correct destination

  • manages traffic between devices

Think of a router as a traffic controller for data.


3. Switches

A switch connects multiple devices inside a network.

Unlike older hubs, a switch sends data only to the correct device, making the network much more efficient.

In schools and businesses, switches allow dozens or hundreds of computers to share the same network.


4. Transmission Media

Devices need a way to send signals.

Common methods include:

Wired

  • Ethernet cables

  • Fibre optic cables

Wireless

  • Wi-Fi

  • Bluetooth

  • Mobile networks

Fibre optic cables are especially impressive because they transmit data as pulses of light through glass fibres, allowing enormous data speeds.


How Data Travels Across a Network

When you send data across a network it does not travel as one large block.

Instead it is broken into small pieces called packets.

Each packet contains:

  • the destination address

  • the source address

  • part of the data

  • error-checking information

Routers read the address on each packet and decide the best path through the network.

This is similar to sending many envelopes through the postal system. Each envelope finds its own route, but they all arrive and are reassembled at the destination.


IP Addresses – The Network’s Postcodes

Every device on a network has an IP address.

An IP address works like a postcode for a computer, telling the network where to send data.

Example:

192.168.1.5

Inside your home network the router assigns addresses automatically using DHCP (Dynamic Host Configuration Protocol).


The Internet – A Network of Networks

The internet itself is simply millions of networks connected together.

Data might travel:

Your laptop → home router → internet provider → major internet backbone → destination server

The journey may pass through dozens of routers across multiple countries in a fraction of a second.


Why Networks Matter

Networks allow:

  • sharing files and printers

  • online learning and video calls

  • cloud computing

  • streaming video and music

  • online gaming

Without networks, modern computing simply would not function.


In short:
A network connects devices, sends data in packets, uses IP addresses to route information, and relies on routers, switches, and transmission media to keep everything moving.


06 March 2026

Understanding Rates of Reaction (A-Level Chemistry)


 Understanding Rates of Reaction (A-Level Chemistry)

Chemical reactions can happen very quickly—like the explosion of hydrogen and oxygen—or very slowly, such as the rusting of iron. The rate of reaction simply describes how fast reactants are converted into products.

Understanding reaction rates is important in chemistry because it allows scientists and engineers to control processes in industry, medicine, environmental science, and even everyday cooking.


What Do We Mean by the Rate of Reaction?

In chemistry, the rate of reaction is the change in concentration of a reactant or product per unit time.

In simple terms:

Rate of Reaction=Change in concentrationTime\text{Rate of Reaction} = \frac{\text{Change in concentration}}{\text{Time}}

For example, if a reactant disappears quickly, the reaction rate is high. If it disappears slowly, the reaction rate is low.

Students often measure reaction rates in the laboratory by observing:

  • The volume of gas produced

  • The loss of mass as gas escapes

  • A colour change

  • The formation of a precipitate


The Collision Theory

The key idea behind reaction rates is collision theory.

For a reaction to occur:

  1. Particles must collide with each other

  2. The collision must have enough energy (activation energy)

  3. The particles must collide in the correct orientation

Only collisions that meet these conditions are called successful collisions.

This explains why many collisions between molecules do not actually lead to a reaction.


Factors That Affect Reaction Rates

Several important factors control how quickly reactions happen.

1. Temperature

Increasing temperature gives particles more kinetic energy.
They move faster and collide more frequently and with greater energy.

Result: Reaction rate increases significantly.


2. Concentration (or Pressure for Gases)

Higher concentration means more particles in the same volume.

This leads to more frequent collisions, increasing the reaction rate.


3. Surface Area

Solid reactants react faster when they are broken into smaller pieces.

For example:

  • Powdered calcium carbonate reacts faster with acid than large marble chips.

Why? Because a larger surface area is exposed to the reactant.


4. Catalysts

A catalyst speeds up a reaction without being used up.

Catalysts work by providing an alternative reaction pathway with lower activation energy.

This means more collisions are energetic enough to lead to a reaction.

Catalysts are extremely important in industry—for example in the Haber process for producing ammonia.


Measuring Reaction Rates in the Laboratory

One of the classic school experiments involves reacting calcium carbonate with hydrochloric acid.

CaCO3+2HClCaCl2+CO2+H2OCaCO_3 + 2HCl \rightarrow CaCl_2 + CO_2 + H_2O

Students can measure the rate by:

  • Collecting carbon dioxide gas in a gas syringe

  • Measuring mass loss as the gas escapes

  • Timing how long it takes for the reaction to finish

Using modern sensors—such as PASCO gas sensors or pressure sensors—students can capture the reaction data digitally and plot rate curves in real time.

This kind of experiment fits perfectly with a modern data-logging chemistry lab, where students can actually see how the rate changes during the reaction.


Why Rates of Reaction Matter

Understanding reaction rates allows chemists to:

  • Make industrial reactions faster and more efficient

  • Prevent dangerous explosions

  • Improve drug production

  • Understand environmental processes

  • Design better catalysts

In many industrial processes, speed and efficiency can save enormous amounts of energy and cost.


Final Thought

Rates of reaction show that chemistry is not just about what reacts, but how quickly it happens. By controlling temperature, concentration, surface area, and catalysts, chemists can influence the speed of reactions and make chemical processes work to our advantage.

For students studying A-Level chemistry, reaction rates are a perfect example of where theory meets practical experimentation—and where good data collection can reveal the hidden dynamics of chemical change.

05 March 2026

Simple Harmonic Motion on a Spring — when the graphs start doing the teaching

 


Simple Harmonic Motion on a Spring — when the graphs start doing the teaching

If you’ve ever taught (or learned) Simple Harmonic Motion (SHM) from a textbook, you’ll know the usual pattern:

  • draw a sine wave

  • write down a = −ω²x

  • nod wisely

  • then secretly wonder why velocity is a quarter of a cycle “ahead” of displacement

Today we’ll do something far more satisfying: we’ll measure SHM properly using PASCO sensors, and we’ll watch displacement, velocity, acceleration and force chase each other around in real time.

This is one of those experiments where students suddenly stop asking “Do we need to know this?” and start saying “Ohhh… that’s what it means.”

What we’re trying to show (in one sentence)

In SHM, the motion is sinusoidal, and the key quantities have fixed phase relationships:

  • Velocity is 90° (¼ cycle) out of phase with displacement

  • Acceleration is 180° out of phase with displacement

  • Force is in phase with acceleration (because F = ma), and also 180° out of phase with displacement (because F = −kx)

Once you see that on real sensor traces, it sticks.


Equipment (PASCO-friendly)

You can do this a few ways; pick what matches your kit.

Core setup

  • A spring and mass (stable stand + clamp)

  • PASCO interface + Capstone (or SPARKvue)

Sensor options

  1. Motion Sensor (ultrasonic) for displacement-time

  2. Rotary Motion Sensor + pulley (if you prefer a guided vertical track)

  3. Force Sensor inline with the spring (excellent for force-time)

  4. Acceleration Sensor (on the mass) or compute acceleration from x(t) data

Nice extras

  • A low-friction guide (to reduce sideways wobble)

  • A little bit of mass variety for changing ω


Method: make the spring behave like a spring (not like a pendulum)

  1. Hang the mass and let it settle at equilibrium.

  2. Pull down a small distance and release gently (keep it within the spring’s linear region).

  3. Start recording.

  4. Repeat with different masses (or different initial amplitudes) to compare.

Tip: If the mass starts wandering sideways, your data will look like SHM performed by someone who’s had three espressos. A simple guide makes a big difference.


What to plot

In PASCO Capstone/SPARKvue you can show multiple traces at once:

  • Displacement x(t)

  • Velocity v(t) (either directly, or using software derivative)

  • Acceleration a(t) (direct sensor or second derivative)

  • Force F(t) (force sensor)

If you can only measure x(t) cleanly, that’s still enough:

  • v(t) is the gradient of x(t)

  • a(t) is the gradient of v(t)
    Then compare shapes and timing.


The bit students remember: phase differences you can actually see

1) Displacement and velocity: the “peak vs zero” rule

  • When displacement is maximum (top or bottom), the mass momentarily stops → velocity is zero.

  • When displacement is zero (passing equilibrium), it’s moving fastest → velocity is maximum.

On the graph this means:

  • Peaks in x(t) line up with zero-crossings in v(t)

  • Peaks in v(t) line up with zero-crossings in x(t)

That’s a clean 90° phase difference.

2) Displacement and acceleration: the “opposite sign” rule

SHM’s signature equation is:

a = −ω²x

So whenever the mass is:

  • below equilibrium (x positive if you choose downwards), acceleration points upwards (negative)

  • above equilibrium, acceleration points downwards

On the graph:

  • x(t) and a(t) are mirror images about the time axis
    That’s 180° out of phase.

3) Force and everything else

If you measure force with a force sensor inline with the spring:

  • Hooke’s law: F = −kx

  • Newton’s law: F = ma

So:

  • F(t) is 180° out of phase with x(t)

  • F(t) is in phase with a(t)

That’s a lovely moment: the students can literally watch “restoring force” appear as a real curve.


Quick analysis ideas (high impact, low fuss)

A) Measure the period and compare to theory

For a mass–spring system:

T = 2π √(m/k)

So if you change the mass, T should change predictably. You can:

  • measure T from peaks on x(t)

  • estimate k from F vs x (see next)

B) Find the spring constant from your own data

If you have both force and displacement, plot F vs x (scatter plot).
You should get a straight line with gradient −k.

That’s one of the nicest “joining up” moments in mechanics:

  • Hooke’s law stops being a slogan and becomes a measured result.

C) Bonus: energy (if you want a stretch goal)

If you can compute velocity, you can estimate:

  • KE ~ ½mv²

  • PE ~ ½kx²
    and see the energy swap back and forth (with small losses).


Common “real world” wrinkles (and why they’re useful)

  • Damping: amplitude slowly decreases. Great for discussing energy loss and why oscillations don’t last forever.

  • Non-linearity: stretch the spring too far and it stops obeying Hooke’s law. Good physics, but messy graphs.

  • Noise in derivatives: velocity and especially acceleration calculated from displacement can be noisy. That’s not failure — it’s a chance to talk about sampling rate, smoothing, and uncertainty.


Wrap-up

This is SHM at its best: not just “sine waves on paper”, but a moving mass producing four linked graphs — and the phase differences become obvious rather than mystical.

If you’re revising SHM for A-Level Physics, or teaching it, this is one of the quickest ways to turn it from memorisation into understanding.

04 March 2026

Maths and Aerospace

 


Maths and Aerospace

Teaching Maths to Aerospace Engineers (without anyone reaching for the eject handle)

There are two kinds of people who end up in aerospace:

  1. The ones who love machines that fly.

  2. The ones who also love the maths that explains why they fly (and why they occasionally try not to).

If you’re teaching maths to aerospace engineering students, you’re not really teaching “maths” in the abstract. You’re teaching a toolkit for staying out of trouble at 35,000 feet… or 35 kilometres up… or at Mach numbers that make your calculator sweat.

Here’s how I approach it.


1) Start with the big promise: maths makes reality predictable

Aerospace engineers live in a world where guessing is expensive.

Maths lets you answer questions like:

  • Will this wing generate enough lift?

  • Will it flutter itself to bits?

  • Will the control system behave, or will it start “dancing”?

  • How wrong will the answer be if the sensors are noisy?

And crucially:
Is the answer plausible before we trust it?
(If your model predicts a passenger jet weighs the same as a labrador, we stop and have a word.)


2) The “greatest hits” of aerospace maths

Vectors and trig: the language of directions and forces

You can’t do aerospace without resolving forces, velocity components, angles of attack, and coordinate frames.

Teaching tip: make it physical.

  • Draw a free-body diagram

  • Split the lift/drag into components

  • Get students to estimate before calculating

Goal: they stop seeing trig as “SOHCAHTOA trauma” and start seeing it as “how you land the thing”.


Calculus: where motion stops being a diagram and becomes a model

Differentiation and integration aren’t just exam topics — they’re how you connect:

  • position → velocity → acceleration

  • thrust profiles → speed changes

  • fuel burn rate → range and endurance

A brilliant moment in teaching is when a student realises:
“Oh… the area under that curve is literally the distance.”
It’s like watching someone discover fire, but with fewer singed eyebrows.


Differential equations: the “this is why it oscillates” chapter

Aerospace is full of systems that behave beautifully… until they don’t.

  • mass–spring–damper models (hello, vibrations)

  • aircraft pitch response

  • control loops

  • stability and resonance

Students often fear differential equations because they look like angry algebra. The trick is to anchor them to a story:

  • What is changing?

  • What causes it to change?

  • What happens if we disturb it?

Once they see it as “cause and effect over time”, it clicks.


Matrices and linear algebra: modern aerospace runs on them

Sensors, navigation, flight control, simulation, optimisation — all matrix-heavy.

Key ideas students actually need:

  • transforming between coordinate frames

  • solving sets of equations efficiently

  • understanding eigenvalues as “stability fingerprints”

  • why small numerical errors can grow teeth

This is where you connect the maths to real tools:

  • spreadsheets (yes, really)

  • MATLAB / Octave

  • Python / NumPy

Teaching reality: even brilliant students will trust a matrix output that is complete nonsense unless you train them to sanity-check.


Statistics and uncertainty: because the real world is noisy

Every aerospace system lives with:

  • measurement error

  • turbulence

  • manufacturing tolerances

  • sensor noise

So the maths must include:

  • standard deviation and confidence

  • propagation of uncertainty

  • error bounds

  • interpreting data like an adult, not a hopeful gambler

This is also where you get to say my favourite teaching phrase:

“If you don’t quantify uncertainty, you haven’t finished the problem — you’ve just stopped writing.”


3) The teaching strategy that actually works

Step 1: Start with the engineering question

Not “differentiate this”.
Instead: “What acceleration does this thrust profile produce?”

Step 2: Build the maths as tools, not hurdles

Each technique earns its place by solving something meaningful.

Step 3: Teach estimation and dimensional analysis early

If units don’t match, it’s wrong.
If the magnitude is silly, it’s wrong.
These two habits prevent most disasters — mathematical and otherwise.

Step 4: Use worked examples like flight training

A pilot doesn’t learn by reading about landing.
They learn by doing it again and again with feedback.

Same with maths: lots of short, targeted practice beats one heroic worksheet.


4) A quick “aerospace-flavoured” mini-example

If a student calculates a climb rate that implies the aircraft reaches the Moon before lunch, we don’t just correct the algebra.

We ask:

  • What assumptions did we make?

  • Are the units consistent?

  • Is the result in the right ballpark?

  • What would a reasonable climb rate look like?

That’s the moment they start thinking like engineers.


5) Final thought: maths is the quiet co-pilot

Aerospace engineering feels glamorous — rockets, jets, satellites, shiny CAD renders.

But underneath it all is maths doing the unglamorous job of keeping everything:

  • stable

  • predictable

  • efficient

  • safe

And if you can teach it in a way that feels practical, grounded, and slightly less terrifying, you’ll produce engineers who don’t just pass exams…

…they build things that behave themselves when they’re a long way from the ground.


If you’d like support

I teach maths in a practical, engineering-focused way — ideal for GCSE/A-Level foundations, university prep, and students who are strong in theory but want confidence applying it to real problems.

03 March 2026

Resistivity — the “personality” of a material in a circuit (with simple practicals)

Resistivity — the “personality” of a material in a circuit (with simple practicals)

If you’ve ever swapped one bit of wire for another and thought, “Hang on… why has the current changed when the battery hasn’t?” — congratulations, you’ve stumbled into resistivity.

Resistance vs resistivity (the bit everyone muddles up)

  • Resistance (R) is the opposition to current of a particular component (this bit of wire, this resistor, this filament). It depends on shape as well as material.

  • Resistivity (ρ) is a property of the material itself. Think of it as how stubborn the material is about letting charge move through it.

The link between them is:

R=ρLAR = \rho \frac{L}{A}

Where:

  • RR = resistance (Ω)

  • ρρ = resistivity (Ω m)

  • LL = length (m)

  • AA = cross-sectional area (m²)

So if you keep the material the same:

  • Longer wire → bigger LL → bigger R

  • Thicker wire → bigger AA → smaller R

That’s why the chunky cables on a car battery look like they mean business: they do.

What resistivity really means (in plain words)

In metals, electrons are the charge carriers. A low resistivity material (like copper) lets electrons drift through fairly easily. A high resistivity material (like nichrome) makes life harder for them, so you get more resistance for the same size wire.

And when the resistance is bigger, for a given voltage:

  • the current drops

  • and the heating effect can increase in the resistor/wire (handy for toasters… less handy for your extension lead).


Practical 1: Length of wire vs resistance (the “slide contact” classic)

Aim: show RLR \propto L for a uniform wire.

You need

  • a length of constantan or nichrome wire stretched straight along a metre rule

  • low-voltage DC supply (1–3 V is plenty)

  • ammeter, voltmeter, crocodile clips (or a sliding contact), leads

Method

  1. Connect the wire in series with the ammeter and supply.

  2. Put the voltmeter across the measured length of wire (e.g. 20 cm, 40 cm, 60 cm…).

  3. For each length, record V and I.

  4. Calculate R=V/IR = V/I for each length.

  5. Plot R (y-axis) against L (x-axis).

Expected result

  • You should get a straight line through (or very near) the origin.

  • The gradient equals ρ/Aρ/A. (Which feels very satisfying if you like that sort of thing.)

Good practice / reliability tips

  • Use low current so the wire doesn’t heat up (temperature changes resistance).

  • Take readings quickly, or allow cooling time between measurements.


Practical 2: Thickness of wire vs resistance (same material, different diameters)

Aim: show R1/AR \propto 1/A.

You need

  • two or three wires of the same material and length but different diameters (e.g. copper or constantan)

  • micrometer (or vernier caliper) to measure diameter

  • same circuit as above

Method

  1. Keep length the same each time.

  2. Measure diameter dd, calculate area A=π(d/2)2A = \pi(d/2)^2.

  3. Measure V and I, calculate R.

  4. Compare R values (or plot R against 1/A1/A).

Expected result

  • Thicker wire (bigger A) gives smaller R.

  • A plot of R vs 1/A should be roughly linear.


Practical 3: Same length, different materials (why nichrome is used in heaters)

Aim: compare resistivity between materials.

You need

  • equal lengths of copper, steel, nichrome/constantan (where possible)

  • same measurement setup

Method

  1. Keep L as close as possible to the same for each sample.

  2. Measure V and I → find R.

  3. If you can estimate A, you can go further and calculate:

    ρ=RAL\rho = R\frac{A}{L}

Expected result

  • Copper tends to show low resistance.

  • Nichrome/constantan higher resistance — ideal where you want resistance without needing miles of wire.


Temperature: the twist in the plot

Resistivity isn’t just “a number in a table” — it changes with temperature.

  • Metals: resistivity usually increases with temperature (more lattice vibrations → more collisions).

  • Semiconductors (like thermistors): resistivity usually decreases with temperature (more charge carriers become available).

A quick demo: put a small filament lamp in circuit and increase the voltage. The filament heats up and its resistance rises — that’s why the I–V graph curves.


Common student mistakes (and how to avoid them)

  • Mixing up R and ρ: resistance is for an object, resistivity is for a material.

  • Forgetting units: resistivity is Ω m, not Ω.

  • Letting the wire heat up: you’ll measure temperature effects instead of the length/area effect.

  • Measuring length but not keeping contact points consistent: crocodile clips can be sneaky.


A neat conclusion

Resistivity is one of those topics that turns “electricity” from something mysterious into something measurable. Change the length, change the area, change the material, change the temperature — and the circuit responds in a predictable way. Physics, basically, is just the universe being politely consistent.

 

02 March 2026

Why the Drosophila Cross is One of the Best Practical Genetics Students Can Do

 


Why the Drosophila Cross is One of the Best Practical Genetics Students Can Do

If you want students to understand genetics rather than simply chant “dominant, recessive, phenotype, genotype” like a spell from Harry Potter, get them crossing Drosophila melanogaster (fruit flies). It’s one of those rare practicals where the messiness of biology turns into something you can actually measure, count, analyse, and argue about — which is exactly what A Level genetics is supposed to be.

1) It turns inheritance from theory into evidence

Punnett squares look beautifully tidy… until real organisms get involved. With Drosophila, students don’t just predict ratios — they collect data and see how close reality gets to expectation. That jump from “the answer is 3:1” to “our class got 2.7:1… why?” is where real scientific thinking starts. They learn that biology is full of variation, sampling error, and experimental limitations — and that this doesn’t make genetics wrong, it makes it interesting.

2) It teaches the whole scientific method in one practical

A Drosophila cross is basically a miniature research project:

  • Hypothesis: Which allele is dominant? Is the gene sex-linked?

  • Method: Set up crosses properly, control variables, avoid contamination

  • Results: Count phenotypes, record carefully, separate males/females

  • Analysis: Calculate ratios, apply a chi-squared test, draw conclusions

  • Evaluation: “What could have caused deviation?” “Was the sample size big enough?”

That’s the core of “How Science Works”, wrapped up in one buzzing little experiment.

3) It makes probability and statistics feel useful (finally)

Genetics is one of the best places to teach students that maths isn’t just something that happens to them in an exam. Counting flies gives naturally “noisy” data, so students see why we use chi-squared and why “close enough” needs a rule, not a shrug. They start to understand:

  • why bigger sample sizes matter

  • how to test whether deviation is down to chance

  • what it means to reject or fail to reject a hypothesis

In other words: they start thinking like scientists, not answer-machines.

4) It brings key genetics concepts to life

With the right crosses, Drosophila can demonstrate:

  • dominance and recessiveness

  • monohybrid and dihybrid inheritance

  • sex linkage (the classic white-eye gene is a favourite)

  • the difference between genotype vs phenotype

  • the importance of controlled breeding and clear parental phenotypes

And because flies have obvious visible traits (eye colour, wing shape, body colour), the genetics feels tangible rather than abstract.

5) It’s realistic biology: living organisms, real constraints

Students quickly discover the “practical genetics” issues you never see on a worksheet:

  • females and males need identifying correctly (and yes, they will mix them up once)

  • timing matters because generations overlap

  • contamination can wreck a cross

  • some traits may reduce survival, skewing ratios

Those frustrations are actually valuable. They learn that good results come from careful technique, and that experimental design matters.

6) It’s brilliant preparation for exam questions (and beyond)

A Level exams love data handling. When students have actually done a cross, they’re far better at:

  • interpreting ratios and working out inheritance patterns

  • explaining anomalies sensibly

  • selecting appropriate genetic diagrams

  • applying chi-squared in a meaningful way rather than “plugging numbers into a formula”

Even better, it’s one of those practicals students remember years later because they were doing something that felt like genuine science, not “colour change = success”.

The bottom line

Crossing Drosophila is beneficial because it takes genetics off the page and puts it into students’ hands. It builds practical skill, statistical confidence, and scientific judgement — and it makes inheritance feel like something you can discover, not just memorise.

If you can run it well, it’s one of the best biology practicals you can do at A Level.

Computing – How Do Networks Work?

 Computing – How Do Networks Work? Almost everything we do with a computer today involves a network . Sending an email, watching a YouTube v...