17 April 2026

The Rise (and Reality Check) of the Metaverse

 

The Rise (and Reality Check) of the Metaverse

 “Virtual Worlds, Real Lessons – But Is the Metaverse Actually Happening?”



A couple of years ago, the Metaverse was the buzzword. We were all apparently about to live, work, shop, and even attend school inside virtual worlds. You’d pop on a headset, become a slightly better-looking avatar, and never need to leave the house again.

Fast forward to today… and things look a little different.


🚀 The Rise – Why Everyone Got Excited

When companies like Meta started investing billions, it sounded like the next internet revolution.

The idea was simple:

  • A fully immersive digital world
  • People interacting via avatars
  • Virtual classrooms, offices, and even social lives

For computing students, this links directly to:

  • Virtual Reality (VR)
  • Augmented Reality (AR)
  • 3D modelling and simulation
  • Networking and real-time data processing

And to be fair—it is impressive technology.

Imagine:

  • Walking through a human heart in Biology
  • Simulating physics experiments without breaking expensive equipment
  • Practising presentations in front of a virtual audience

From a teaching perspective, that’s exciting.


🧠 The Reality Check – Why It Hasn’t Taken Over (Yet)

Here’s the honest bit.

The Metaverse hasn’t quite delivered on its original promise.

Why?

1. 🥽 The Headset Problem

Most people don’t want to sit for hours wearing a VR headset.
They’re expensive, bulky, and—after a while—slightly nauseating.


2. 💰 Cost vs Benefit

Schools and students ask a simple question:
“Is this better than a laptop and a whiteboard?”

At the moment… not always.


3. 🧑‍🤝‍🧑 Humans Like the Real World

It turns out:

  • Face-to-face teaching works
  • Real classrooms still matter
  • And yes… people still like chatting without an avatar

4. ⚙️ Technology Isn’t Quite There

For a true Metaverse, you need:

  • Ultra-fast internet
  • Powerful graphics
  • Seamless interaction

We’re getting there—but not quite yet.


🎯 So Why Should GCSE & A Level Students Care?

Because even if the hype has cooled, the technology behind it is very real.

Students studying computing will encounter:

  • VR/AR development
  • Game engines (like Unity or Unreal)
  • Human-computer interaction
  • Data processing in real time
  • Ethical issues (privacy, identity, addiction)

👉 In other words:
The Metaverse might not have taken over—but the skills behind it are growing fast.


🔮 My Prediction (With a Slightly Raised Eyebrow)

The Metaverse isn’t dead—it’s just… growing up.

Instead of one giant virtual world, we’re more likely to see:

  • VR used in training and education
  • AR used in real-world applications
  • Virtual environments used where they actually make sense

⚓ Final Thought

A bit like learning to sail (badly, in my case) which can be found here, you can read all the theory you like—but at some point, you need the real experience.

The Metaverse is a fantastic tool.
But it’s not a replacement for reality—at least not yet.

16 April 2026

New Equipment, Something Different – Hope’s Apparatus

 New Equipment, Something Different – Hope’s Apparatus


Every now and then, a piece of equipment arrives in the lab that makes you stop, smile… and think, “why didn’t I get one of these years ago?”

This week’s arrival is exactly that: Hope’s Apparatus.

Now, at first glance it looks like something between a Victorian science experiment and a piece of plumbing rescued from under the sink. A tall cylinder, a couple of thermometers sticking out at different heights, and a mysterious ring where something cold is about to happen. Not exactly cutting-edge PASCO tech… but deceptively powerful.

What Does It Do?

Hope’s Apparatus is used to demonstrate one of the most unusual properties of water:

👉 Water is most dense at 4°C, not at 0°C.

This is one of those facts students often memorise… and then promptly forget because it doesn’t feel real.

Until you see it happen.

The Magic in Action

You fill the tube with water.
Then surround the middle section with a freezing mixture (usually ice and salt or calcium chloride).

Now the interesting part begins:

  • The water around the middle cools first
  • As it reaches 4°C, it becomes denser and sinks
  • But as it cools further towards 0°C, it becomes less dense and rises

So you end up with:

  • Colder water at the top
  • Warmer (but denser!) water at the bottom

And two thermometers quietly proving the whole thing without any arguments.

Why This Matters

This isn’t just a quirky physics demo—it explains why life survives in lakes during winter.

If water behaved “normally”:

  • Lakes would freeze from the bottom up
  • Fish would not be sending you Christmas cards

Instead:

  • 4°C water sinks
  • Ice forms on the surface
  • The lake insulates itself

Nature, once again, quietly showing off.

In the Lab

What I like about Hope’s Apparatus is that it forces students to think, not just calculate.

There are no complicated equations.
No mark scheme shortcuts.

Just observation, explanation, and that slightly uncomfortable moment when what you thought would happen… doesn’t.

And those are often the best lessons.

15 April 2026

The Mechanics of Ladders – Why Do Students Find Them So Difficult?


The Mechanics of Ladders – Why Do Students Find Them So Difficult?

The Problem with Ladder Questions

Ladder problems appear simple… until you try one.

A ladder leans against a wall. Someone climbs up it. It doesn’t slip (hopefully).
So why do so many GCSE and A-Level students suddenly lose confidence?

Because ladder questions quietly combine multiple ideas at once:

  • Forces
  • Moments (turning effects)
  • Friction
  • Equilibrium

It’s not one topic… it’s all of mechanics at once.




The Core Idea – Equilibrium

At the heart of every ladder problem is one key principle:

The ladder is in equilibrium

That means:

  • Total force = 0
  • Total moment = 0

This is where things start to go wrong for many students.


Moments – The Hidden Difficulty

Most students are fine with forces.
But moments? That’s where confusion creeps in.

Moment=Force×Distance\text{Moment} = \text{Force} \times \text{Distance}

In ladder questions:

  • You must pick a pivot point (usually the bottom of the ladder)
  • Then calculate moments caused by:
    • The ladder’s weight
    • The person’s weight
    • Reaction forces

The mistake?
Students often:

  • Choose the wrong pivot
  • Forget perpendicular distances
  • Miss forces entirely

Forces – More Than You Think

A ladder has more forces acting on it than students expect:

  • Weight of the ladder (middle)
  • Weight of the person (somewhere up the ladder)
  • Normal reaction from the floor
  • Friction at the floor
  • Reaction force from the wall

That’s five forces before you even start!

No wonder it feels overwhelming.


Why Students Struggle

1. ❌ Poor Diagrams

If the diagram isn’t clear → the maths collapses.

Students often:

  • Miss forces
  • Draw arrows in wrong directions
  • Forget where weights act

2. ❌ Not Reading the Question Carefully

Sound familiar?

“Find the friction at the base”…
…but the student solves for the reaction at the wall.


3. ❌ Mixing Up Sine and Cosine

Angles appear… and suddenly:

  • sin becomes cos
  • cos becomes sin
  • and everything falls apart (like the ladder!)

4. ❌ Trying to Memorise Instead of Understand

Ladder problems cannot be memorised.

They require:

 Understanding + method + careful working


✅ The Simple Method That Works

Here’s the approach I teach every time:

  1. Read the question twice
  2. Draw a clear diagram
  3. Label ALL forces
  4. Choose a pivot (usually the base)
  5. Apply moments = 0
  6. Resolve forces if needed (horizontal & vertical)
  7. Check your answer makes sense

A Teaching Insight

After 40 years of teaching, I’ve noticed something interesting:

Students who rush… fail ladder questions
Students who slow down… usually get them right

Ladders reward careful thinking, not speed.


In the Lab / Classroom

One of the best ways to teach this is practically:

  • Lean a real ladder (or metre rule) against a wall
  • Add weights
  • Ask: “What stops it slipping?”

Suddenly…

 friction becomes real
moments make sense
physics clicks

14 April 2026

Seeing the Invisible – Electrons in a Cathode Ray Tube


Seeing the Invisible – Electrons in a Cathode Ray Tube

Electrons… tiny, negatively charged particles that you can’t see, touch, or smell.

Yet in the lab, we can make them visible.

One of my favourite demonstrations (and a classic in physics) is using a Cathode Ray Tube (CRT) to “see” electrons in action. It’s a beautiful mix of theory and real-world evidence.


What is a Cathode Ray Tube?

A CRT is essentially a vacuum tube with three key parts:

  • Electron gun – fires electrons from a heated cathode
  • Deflection plates – control the path of the electrons
  • Fluorescent screen – glows when struck by electrons

In a vacuum, electrons travel in straight lines. When they hit the screen, they produce a glowing spot — suddenly, the invisible becomes visible.


What Does This Show Us About Electrons?

This simple setup reveals some fundamental properties of electrons:

1. Electrons have mass

They travel in straight lines and can be deflected. Anything that changes direction must have mass.

2. Electrons carry negative charge

Apply an electric field across the plates and the beam bends toward the positive plate. That tells us the charge is negative.

3. Electrons can be accelerated

By increasing the voltage, the beam moves faster and hits the screen with more energy.

4. Electrons behave predictably

They follow well-defined paths under electric and magnetic fields — essential for understanding circuits and modern electronics.


The Key Experiment

This work traces back to J. J. Thomson in 1897, who used a CRT to measure the charge-to-mass ratio of the electron.

His conclusion?
Atoms were not indivisible after all.

That discovery completely changed physics.


Why This Still Matters Today

CRT technology may feel old-fashioned (unless you’ve still got an ancient TV in the loft), but the principles are everywhere:

  • Oscilloscopes in school labs
  • Electron microscopes
  • Particle accelerators
  • Even the foundations of modern electronics

And more importantly for students:

👉 It’s a perfect exam topic – linking electricity, fields, and particle physics in one neat experiment.


A Classroom Twist

When I run this demonstration, I often ask students:

“Are we actually seeing electrons… or just the effect of electrons?”

It’s a great way to push thinking beyond memorising facts and into understanding evidence.


Exploring Electron Properties with Teltron Tubes



There’s something rather magical about switching on a Teltron tube in a darkened lab…

A faint green glow appears… then a beam… and suddenly you are watching electrons move in real time.

For students, this is often the moment when abstract physics becomes real.


What Are Teltron Tubes?

Teltron tubes are modern versions of the classic cathode ray experiments. They allow us to investigate electrons under controlled conditions with much clearer visual results than older equipment.

Typically, they include:

  • A low-pressure gas-filled tube (so the electron path glows)
  • An electron gun to produce a beam
  • Electric and/or magnetic field controls
  • Often Helmholtz coils to create a uniform magnetic field

The result? A visible beam of electrons that we can bend, shape, and measure.


What Can We Learn?

Using Teltron tubes, students can explore several key properties of electrons:


1. Electrons Travel in Straight Lines

With no external fields applied, the beam travels directly from the cathode to the screen.

Evidence that electrons behave like particles with momentum.


2. Electrons Carry Charge

Apply an electric field and the beam deflects.

Just like in the experiments of J. J. Thomson, the direction of deflection shows the electron is negatively charged.


3. Magnetic Fields Curve Electron Paths

Switch on the Helmholtz coils and something wonderful happens…

The straight beam becomes a circle.

That circular motion is caused by the magnetic force acting perpendicular to the velocity of the electrons.


4. Measuring the Charge-to-Mass Ratio

This is where it gets really interesting.

By adjusting the magnetic field and measuring the radius of the circular path, students can calculate the specific charge (e/m) of the electron.

The relationship is:

em=vBr\frac{e}{m} = \frac{v}{Br}

(Combined with energy from accelerating voltage in full derivations.)

This is not just theory — this is a real experimental measurement of a fundamental constant.


Why Teltron Tubes Are Brilliant for Teaching

From years of teaching, these are a few reasons they work so well:

  • Students can see the beam move instantly
  • Adjusting controls gives immediate feedback
  • It links multiple topics:
    • Electricity
    • Magnetism
    • Circular motion
    • Particle physics

And perhaps most importantly…

It encourages curiosity.

Students start asking:

  • “What happens if I increase the voltage?”
  • “Why does the circle get bigger?”
  • “Can we stop it completely?”

That’s when real learning begins.


A Classic Demonstration Trick

I often start by asking:

“If electrons are so small… how can we possibly see them?”

Then I switch off the lights and power up the tube.

The reaction is always the same.

A quiet:
“Whoa…”


Bringing It Back to Exams

Teltron tube experiments regularly underpin exam questions on:

  • Magnetic fields and forces
  • Circular motion
  • Energy and accelerating voltage
  • Experimental methods and uncertainties

So while it looks like a bit of fun…

It’s also serious exam preparation.

13 April 2026

Spring Has Sprung – And So Has Photosynthesis!


 Spring Has Sprung – And So Has Photosynthesis!

There’s something magical about spring. The trees burst into leaf, gardens wake up, and suddenly everything is… green again.

But behind that explosion of life is one of the most important biological processes on Earth: photosynthesis.

And at the heart of photosynthesis lie two unsung heroes:
Photosystem I (PSI)
Photosystem II (PSII)

They sound like they should come in order… but, as with many things in biology, it’s not quite that simple.


The Big Picture

Photosynthesis happens inside chloroplasts, specifically in the thylakoid membranes.

Both photosystems:

  • Absorb light energy
  • Use chlorophyll
  • Drive the light-dependent reactions

But they do very different jobs.


Photosystem II – The One That Goes First (Despite the Name)



Photosystem II is where it all begins.

Key features:

  • Absorbs light best at 680 nm (called P680)
  • Splits water (photolysis)
  • Produces:
    • Oxygen (O₂) 
    • Protons (H⁺)
    • Electrons (e⁻)

This is why plants produce oxygen – a rather useful by-product for the rest of us!

What it does:

  • Boosts electrons to a higher energy level
  • Sends them down an electron transport chain
  • Helps create a proton gradient → used to make ATP

Think of PSII as the “starter motor” of photosynthesis.


Photosystem I – The Finisher


Photosystem I comes later in the process.

Key features:

  • Absorbs light best at 700 nm (P700)
  • Does not split water
  • Uses incoming electrons to make NADPH

What it does:

  • Re-energises electrons (they’ve lost energy along the chain)
  • Transfers them to NADP⁺
  • Forms NADPH → essential for the Calvin Cycle

Think of PSI as the “final boost” that stores energy in a usable chemical form.


The Key Differences (Exam Gold!)

FeaturePhotosystem IIPhotosystem I
OrderFirstSecond
Reaction centreP680P700
Splits water?✅ Yes❌ No
Produces oxygen?✅ Yes❌ No
Main roleElectron supply + ATP productionNADPH production
PositionStart of ETCEnd of ETC

🌼 Why This Matters in Spring

All that fresh green growth you see:

  • Leaves unfolding
  • Grass racing ahead of your lawnmower
  • Blossoms appearing almost overnight

It’s powered by PSII and PSI working together

PSII provides:

  • The electrons
  • The oxygen

PSI provides:

  • The reducing power (NADPH)

Together, they allow plants to turn:
Light + Water + CO₂
Into glucose and life itself


A Quick Teaching Tip (From the Lab)

Students often remember it like this:

“2 before 1”

  • Photosystem II happens first
  • Photosystem I happens second

It’s counterintuitive… which is exactly why examiners love it.

12 April 2026

From Split Brains to Taxi Drivers: Learning How the Brain Works


 From Split Brains to Taxi Drivers: Learning How the Brain Works

The human brain is a wonderfully awkward thing. It lets us write essays, drive cars, remember where we left the keys, and occasionally walk into a room with absolutely no idea why we went there in the first place.

In psychology, one of the most fascinating things is that we have learnt so much about how the brain works not just by looking at healthy brains, but by studying what happens when something changes, gets damaged, or develops in an unusual way. In other words, psychology has often progressed by looking at brains under pressure.

Take the famous split-brain studies by Roger Sperry. These involved people whose two brain hemispheres had been surgically separated to reduce severe epilepsy. Suddenly, psychologists had a way to explore what each half of the brain was doing. What they found was extraordinary. The left and right hemispheres could process information differently, and in some cases seemed almost like two minds sharing the same skull. It was a dramatic reminder that the brain is not just one simple lump doing everything together. It is specialised, divided, and yet somehow usually works as a whole.

Then there is the case of HM, one of the most important patients in psychology. After surgery intended to help his epilepsy, he could no longer form new long-term memories. He could remember much of his earlier life, but new experiences slipped away almost immediately. From this tragic case, psychologists learnt a huge amount about memory. We discovered that memory is not a single system. There are different types of memory, handled by different brain structures, and the hippocampus is especially important for forming new long-term memories.

And then we come to one of my favourites: London taxi drivers. You might think they belong in a transport blog rather than a psychology one, but they helped reveal something very important about the brain. To qualify as a London taxi driver, people traditionally had to learn “The Knowledge” — an astonishing mental map of London streets and routes. Studies found differences in the hippocampus of these taxi drivers compared with other people. In simple terms, the brain appeared to adapt to the demands placed on it. The more it was used for spatial navigation, the more it changed. That is a powerful example of neuroplasticity — the brain’s ability to reorganise itself.

So what do split brains, memory patients, and taxi drivers all have in common?

They show that the brain is both specialised and adaptable.

Some parts of the brain are linked with particular functions. Language tends to be strongly associated with the left hemisphere in most people. Memory formation relies heavily on the hippocampus. Spatial navigation can reshape parts of the brain through repeated use. But at the same time, the brain is not rigid. It changes with experience. It responds to injury, training, learning, and environment.

That matters far beyond the psychology classroom.

It matters for education, because repetition and practice really do help build pathways in the brain.

It matters for rehabilitation, because people can sometimes recover lost skills or find new ways around damaged areas.

It matters for ageing, because keeping the brain active is not just a nice slogan. It has a biological basis.

And it matters for students, because psychology is not just about theories on a page. It is about real people, real brains, and real evidence.

What I like about this topic is that it brings psychology alive. You start with a textbook term like localisation of function or neuroplasticity, and then suddenly you are talking about a man who cannot form new memories, people whose hemispheres no longer communicate normally, or taxi drivers whose brains have adapted to the roads of London.

That is when psychology stops being a list of names and studies and starts becoming a story about what makes us human.

The brain is not a finished machine that comes out of the box complete. It is more like an ongoing building project — part wiring diagram, part road map, part improvisation. Most of the time it works brilliantly. Sometimes it gets things wrong. And sometimes, by studying those mistakes and changes, we learn the most.

So yes, from split brains to taxi drivers, psychology gives us an extraordinary window into how the brain works.

And if you have forgotten where you put your glasses while reading this, do not worry. Your hippocampus is probably doing its best.

11 April 2026

Analogue Computers Aren’t Dead — They’re Just Evolving


Analogue Computers Aren’t Dead — They’re Just Evolving

When most people hear the words computer, they picture something digital: a laptop, a phone, a tablet, or perhaps a powerful server farm humming away in a data centre. Everything today seems to come down to bits, binary, and software.

So surely analog computers are dead?

Not at all.

They have simply slipped quietly out of the spotlight and changed form.

Long before digital machines took over, analog computers were solving problems by using physical quantities to represent other quantities. A voltage might stand for speed. A rotating shaft might stand for time. The movement of gears, wheels, pulleys, fluids or electrical currents could model a real system directly. Rather than calculating with ones and zeros, an analog computer behaved like the problem.

That is what made them so clever.

A slide rule is a simple analog computer. So is a car’s old-fashioned speedometer. A mechanical tide predictor, a differential analyser, and even some flight instruments all used continuous physical change to model a system and give an answer.



Digital computers eventually pushed most analog machines aside because they are more flexible, more precise in many situations, easier to programme, and much better at storing and copying information. One machine can do thousands of completely different jobs just by loading different software. That is hard to beat.

But analog never completely vanished.

In fact, it is having something of a quiet comeback.

One reason is speed. For some specialised tasks, analog systems can process information in real time with extraordinary efficiency because they are not simulating the system step by step — they are the system in electrical form. This can be useful in control systems, signal processing, and some kinds of scientific instrumentation.

Another reason is energy use. As we push against the limits of power consumption in modern computing, researchers are once again asking whether certain tasks can be handled more efficiently by analog or hybrid analog-digital designs. It turns out that using a continuous physical system to solve a continuous physical problem is sometimes rather sensible.

Then there is artificial intelligence. Much of the excitement today is about digital AI running on powerful chips, but researchers are also exploring analog approaches in neuromorphic computing, optical computing, and in-memory computing. These systems try to do some of the work in a way that is closer to how nature works: parallel, continuous, and efficient.

Even the humble sensor is often analog at heart. Temperature, light, sound, pressure and motion all begin life as analog signals. Before a digital system can process them, they often need to be measured, amplified, filtered or converted. The digital world still rests heavily on analog foundations.

So no, analog computers are not dead.

They are just no longer sitting in the middle of the desk with spinning discs and dramatic levers. They are hidden inside modern systems, reborn in specialist hardware, and reappearing in research labs where engineers are trying to solve problems that digital machines do not handle efficiently enough on their own.

In a way, analog computing has grown up.

It no longer tries to be the universal machine that digital computing became. Instead, it is finding its place as the smart specialist — fast, elegant, efficient, and sometimes far better suited to the job.

Which is a useful lesson in itself. In technology, old ideas rarely die completely. They just wait for the right moment to return wearing a new jacket.

And probably with fewer cogs.

The Rise (and Reality Check) of the Metaverse

  The Rise (and Reality Check) of the Metaverse  “Virtual Worlds, Real Lessons – But Is the Metaverse Actually Happening?” A couple of years...