15 June 2026

Summer Chafer — The Small Brown Beetle That Most People Walk Past

 


Summer Chafer — The Small Brown Beetle That Most People Walk Past

“Not every clumsy brown beetle is a May bug — this one is its smaller summer cousin.”

A few days ago, near the River Thames, I found a small brown beetle about 18 mm long. At first glance, it would have been very easy to dismiss it as “just a beetle”, or perhaps mistake it for a small May bug. It was brown, rather hairy, slightly clumsy, and looked as though it had not read the flying manual properly.

But when you stop, look closely and ask the obvious biological question — what exactly is this? — a whole hidden world opens up.

The beetle was a Summer Chafer, Amphimallon solstitiale, also sometimes called the European June Beetle. It is one of those creatures that lives its life around us while most people never notice it at all.

And that, I think, is a real problem for biology education.

Biology Is Not Just Something in a Textbook

Many biology students can tell you the definition of a habitat, food chain, ecosystem, adaptation or life cycle. They may be able to label diagrams, write exam answers and remember the correct keywords.

But then they walk through a garden, across a school field, along a riverbank or past a hedge and do not see the living biology happening all around them.

They see “flies”.

They see “bugs”.

They see “weeds”.

They see “a bird”.

They see “something crawling”.

What they often do not see is the complexity.

A beetle is not just a beetle. It has a life cycle, a habitat, feeding relationships, predators, adaptations, behaviours and a role in the ecosystem. It may spend years hidden underground as a larva before appearing for a brief adult stage in summer. It may be food for birds, mammals or other invertebrates. It may feed on leaves or roots. It may be part of the huge, mostly invisible machinery that keeps ecosystems functioning.

That is real biology.

Meet the Summer Chafer

The Summer Chafer is a medium-sized brown beetle, smaller than the familiar Common Cockchafer or May bug. It is usually around 16–20 mm long, with brown wing cases, a hairy body and a rather rounded end to the abdomen.

It is not an elegant flyer.

Like many chafers, it often appears slightly confused by the modern world. It may fly at dusk, bump into lights, crash into windows, land upside down, or blunder around with great determination and very little grace.

But that apparent clumsiness hides a perfectly successful survival strategy. The adult beetles appear in summer, often around June, July and August, especially at dusk. They may be found around meadows, hedgerows, woodland edges and gardens.

In other words, exactly the sort of places students walk through without noticing anything.

A Life Mostly Spent Underground

One of the most interesting things about the Summer Chafer is that the adult beetle is only the most visible part of the story.

For much of its life, it exists as a grub underground.

Chafer grubs are the pale, curved, C-shaped larvae that live in soil. They have brownish heads and small legs near the front of the body. Some species feed on decaying organic matter, while others feed on roots. Summer Chafer larvae can feed underground on plant roots and may spend two or three years developing before finally pupating and emerging as adult beetles.

That means the beetle we see flying clumsily around a garden light in summer may have spent years hidden beneath our feet.

This is a wonderful teaching point.

A student may look at a beetle and think, “There it is.”

But biology asks, “Where has it been? What did it feed on? What fed on it? What conditions did it need? Why has it emerged now? How does it find a mate? What happens next?”

Those questions are where biology becomes exciting.

Is It a Pest or a Useful Part of Nature?

This is where biology becomes more subtle.

Some chafer grubs can damage lawns and plant roots, especially if they occur in large numbers. Gardeners may notice patches of grass turning yellow or being pulled up by birds, foxes or badgers searching for grubs. That does not mean every chafer grub is a disaster, and it certainly does not mean every beetle should be destroyed on sight.

Nature is rarely that simple.

The same grub that annoys a lawn owner may be part of a food web. The same beetle that nibbles leaves may become food for another animal. The same insect that is treated as a nuisance in one setting may be an important part of biodiversity in another.

This is a valuable lesson for students. Biology is not divided neatly into “good animals” and “bad animals”. A species may be beneficial, harmful, neutral or simply inconvenient depending on the situation.

The Summer Chafer is not a villain. It is a living organism trying to survive.

The Problem With Not Looking

I sometimes think that one of the greatest barriers to learning biology is not lack of intelligence, but lack of attention.

Students are surrounded by biology every day, but many have not been trained to look. They walk past lichens on walls, moss in paving cracks, insects under leaves, fungi in damp corners, birds feeding on lawns, pond skaters on water and beetles on paths.

They are living in a giant outdoor laboratory but treating it as background scenery.

This is why I love using real examples in teaching. A beetle found near the River Thames can lead to a discussion of classification, adaptation, life cycles, habitats, food webs, biodiversity, human impact, pest control, conservation and scientific observation.

One small insect can become an entire lesson.

Turning a Beetle Into a Biology Lesson

If I were using the Summer Chafer with a student, I would not simply say, “This is a Summer Chafer. Learn the name.”

That would miss the point.

Instead, I might ask:

What features can you see?
The body shape, colour, legs, antennae, wing cases and hairs all give clues.

How big is it?
A ruler or calipers immediately turns a casual sighting into a measurement.

Where was it found?
Habitat matters. Was it near grass, trees, hedges, water, lights or disturbed soil?

What time of day was it active?
Many beetles behave differently at dusk or at night.

What might it eat?
Adults and larvae may feed on different things, which links beautifully to life cycles.

What might eat it?
Birds, mammals and other invertebrates may all be part of the story.

How could we record it properly?
A photograph, date, location and identification notes turn an observation into useful natural-history data.

This is how students learn to think scientifically. Not by memorising isolated facts, but by asking better questions.

From “That’s a Bug” to “That’s an Ecosystem”

The Summer Chafer also gives us a route into a much bigger discussion: the decline of insect awareness.

People worry, quite rightly, about large animals. They notice birds, deer, foxes and badgers. But insects are often ignored unless they sting, bite, buzz around food or enter the house.

That is a mistake.

Insects pollinate, recycle, aerate soil, provide food for other animals, break down waste, regulate populations and form a huge part of terrestrial biodiversity. Remove insects from an ecosystem and many other things begin to fail.

The problem is that insects are small. Their work is quiet. Their importance is often invisible.

A Summer Chafer bumping into a light on a warm evening is not just a comedy beetle. It is a reminder that we share the world with thousands of smaller lives, most of which we barely understand.

Encouraging Insects Rather Than Ignoring Them

If we want students to care about biology, we need to help them see it first.

That can start very simply:

Leave some areas of grass a little longer.
Grow a mixture of plants rather than a sterile lawn.
Avoid unnecessary pesticide use.
Keep hedges, leaf litter and wild corners where possible.
Create log piles and undisturbed soil areas.
Plant for pollinators.
Look closely before tidying everything away.

A perfectly neat garden may look controlled, but it is often poorer for wildlife. A slightly wilder garden may contain far more life, more stories and more opportunities for discovery.

This does not mean letting everything become a jungle. It means understanding that nature needs somewhere to live.

Why This Matters in Education

GCSE and A-Level Biology can become very exam-focused. Of course students need exam technique. They need keywords, practical skills, data handling and strong written answers.

But biology must not become a subject that only exists on paper.

A student who notices a beetle, photographs it, measures it, identifies it, researches its habitat and asks what role it plays in an ecosystem is doing real biology.

They are observing.
They are questioning.
They are collecting evidence.
They are making links.
They are thinking like a scientist.

That is far more powerful than simply being told to memorise another definition.

Conclusion: Open Your Eyes and Biology Appears

The Summer Chafer is not rare enough to cause national excitement, not large enough to frighten anyone, and not colourful enough to make most people stop in their tracks.

But that is exactly why it matters.

It represents the wildlife we usually miss.

The small brown beetle on the path.
The grub beneath the soil.
The insect flying at dusk.
The creature dismissed as “just a bug”.

Biology is not only found in laboratories, textbooks and examination papers. It is also found on riverbanks, in gardens, under leaves, beneath the soil and around the lights on a summer evening.

The next time a clumsy brown beetle bumps into a window or lands on the path, do not just brush it aside.

Stop.

Look.

Ask what it is.

Because once students begin to notice the small things, the whole living world becomes much bigger.

14 June 2026

Business Studies: The Subject That Connects School to the Real World

 


Business Studies: The Subject That Connects School to the Real World

Can you think of a company that does not do business?

Can you think of many people who do not either own a business, work for a business, buy from a business, or rely on businesses every single day?

It is actually quite difficult.

From the local corner shop to Amazon, from a plumber working as a sole trader to a multinational technology company, business is everywhere. We use businesses, work in businesses, complain about businesses, admire businesses, and sometimes even dream of starting our own.

That is why Business Studies is such a valuable subject. It is not just about learning definitions for an exam. It is about understanding how the world works.

Business Is All Around Us

Every time a student buys a drink, orders something online, pays for a haircut, downloads an app, watches YouTube, or goes to a football match, they are interacting with business.

Behind each of those simple everyday actions are important business questions:

Why is that product priced that way?

How did the company advertise it?

Who designed the packaging?

How does the business make a profit?

Who manages the staff?

How does the company deal with complaints?

What happens if costs rise?

Why do some businesses succeed while others fail?

Business Studies helps students see behind the curtain. Instead of simply being customers, they begin to understand the decisions that businesses have to make every day.

Why Business Studies Is So Popular

Business Studies is popular because students can see its relevance immediately.

Unlike some subjects where students ask, “When will I ever use this?”, Business Studies provides examples everywhere. A student might not immediately see why they need quadratic equations or detailed cell biology, but they can usually understand why profit, wages, advertising, customer service and leadership matter.

It also suits a wide range of students. Some enjoy the finance and numbers. Others enjoy marketing, branding and communication. Some are interested in people, leadership and motivation. Others are attracted by entrepreneurship and the idea of one day running their own business.

That is one of the strengths of the subject. It is broad, practical and connected to real decisions.

Business Studies Builds Employable Young People

One of the greatest strengths of Business Studies is that it develops skills employers actually value.

Students learn how to communicate clearly, work in teams, make decisions, solve problems, manage time, understand customers, think about costs and consider risks.

These are not just exam skills. These are workplace skills.

A student who has studied business is more likely to understand why arriving on time matters, why customer service affects reputation, why cash flow can destroy even a profitable business, and why managers have to make difficult decisions.

They begin to understand that a business is not just a logo or a product. It is a collection of people, systems, money, ideas, responsibilities and risks.

That makes Business Studies a useful subject not only for students who want to become entrepreneurs, but also for those who want to work in almost any career.

Business Is Not Just for Future Business Owners

Some students think Business Studies is only useful if they want to start a company. That is not true.

Doctors work in organisations. Engineers work for companies. Scientists work in laboratories funded by businesses, universities or public bodies. Teachers work in schools that still have budgets, staffing, marketing, recruitment and management structures. Artists, musicians, photographers and video producers all need to understand pricing, promotion and customers.

Even people who are self-employed need business skills. In fact, they may need them even more.

A brilliant photographer who cannot price their work properly may struggle. A skilled tradesperson who cannot manage bookings and invoices may lose customers. A talented musician who does not understand promotion may never reach an audience.

Business Studies gives students a language and framework for understanding all of this.

Learning Business by Doing Business

In my own teaching, I believe students should not just learn about business from a textbook. They should experience it.

That is why I give students practice at running an actual company. Not a pretend game. Not a simulation where nothing matters. A real business environment with real roles, responsibilities and decisions.

Students can take on different positions. One might be responsible for marketing. Another may look at finance. Someone else may focus on operations, production, customer communication, research, or social media.

This changes the whole learning experience.

Suddenly, business is not just a diagram in a revision guide. It becomes real.

A student who is responsible for marketing has to think carefully about the audience. Who are we trying to reach? What message will work? What image should we use? Which platform is best? What makes people stop scrolling?

A student helping with finance has to think about costs, profit, pricing and whether an idea is actually viable.

A student involved in operations has to think about materials, equipment, timing, quality control and what happens if something goes wrong.

These are exactly the kinds of questions real businesses face every day.

Roles and Responsibilities Matter

One of the most valuable lessons students learn from this approach is that businesses rely on people doing their jobs properly.

In school, students are often judged individually. In business, the work of one person affects everyone else.

If the marketing is poor, the product may not sell.

If the finance is badly planned, the business may run out of money.

If the product is not made properly, customers may complain.

If communication is unclear, people waste time or make mistakes.

If leadership is weak, the whole team may lose direction.

This gives students a powerful lesson in responsibility. Their work matters because other people are depending on them.

That is a very different experience from simply completing a worksheet.

The Confidence to Make Decisions

Many young people are nervous about making decisions. They are used to being told what to do, how to do it and what the correct answer is.

Business does not always work like that.

Sometimes there is no perfect answer. There is only the best decision based on the information available at the time.

Should we spend more on advertising?

Should we lower the price?

Should we improve the product first?

Should we focus on quality or speed?

Should we target parents, students, schools or local businesses?

These questions force students to think, discuss, justify and evaluate.

That is excellent preparation for exams, but it is also excellent preparation for life.

Turning Theory Into Experience

Business Studies includes important theoretical ideas: market research, cash flow, profit, loss, break-even, branding, recruitment, motivation, leadership styles, economies of scale, stakeholders and business ethics.

These ideas are important, but they become much more powerful when students can see them happening in practice.

For example, cash flow can seem like a dry topic on paper. But when students realise that a business may have customers, orders and profit on paper, yet still struggle because money has not arrived in the bank, the idea becomes real.

Marketing sounds simple until students have to create a message that actually gets attention.

Customer service sounds obvious until students have to write a polite response to a complaint.

Leadership sounds easy until students have to organise a team of people with different ideas, different strengths and different levels of confidence.

That is when learning becomes meaningful.

Business Studies Encourages Enterprise

One of the exciting things about Business Studies is that it encourages students to be enterprising.

They begin to ask, “Could I make something?” “Could I sell something?” “Could I solve a problem?” “Could I turn an idea into a project?”

This does not mean every student has to become the next Alan Sugar or start a multinational company from their bedroom. Enterprise can start much smaller.

It might be creating a small product.

It might be helping with social media.

It might be organising an event.

It might be designing a leaflet.

It might be researching a market.

It might be developing a simple service for local people.

The important thing is that students begin to see themselves as people who can create value, not just consume it.

Learning From Real Mistakes

A real business project also teaches students that mistakes are not disasters. They are part of the process.

A design might not work.

A social media post might get little attention.

A product might cost more to make than expected.

A customer might not understand the message.

A deadline might be missed.

A team member might forget to do something important.

In a classroom, mistakes can feel embarrassing. In business, mistakes are data. They tell you what needs improving.

This is a valuable lesson for young people. Resilience, reflection and improvement are essential business skills.

Why This Experience Is Hard to Gain Elsewhere

Many students leave school with qualifications but very little experience of how organisations actually work.

They may know how to pass exams, but they may not yet know how to manage a project, speak to a customer, plan a budget, write promotional material, take responsibility for a task, or work under real conditions.

That is why practical business experience is so valuable.

It gives students something different. Something they can talk about in interviews. Something they can include in personal statements. Something that helps them stand out.

Instead of simply saying, “I studied marketing,” they can say, “I helped create a marketing plan.”

Instead of saying, “I learned about finance,” they can say, “I helped calculate costs and consider pricing.”

Instead of saying, “I understand teamwork,” they can say, “I worked as part of a team where my role affected the success of the project.”

That is much more powerful.

Business Studies and the Future of Work

The world of work is changing rapidly. Artificial intelligence, automation, online selling, social media, remote working and digital services are transforming how businesses operate.

This makes Business Studies even more important, not less.

Young people need to understand how businesses adapt. They need to understand why some jobs change, why new markets appear, and why old ways of working disappear.

They also need to understand that technology alone is not enough. Businesses still need people who can think clearly, communicate well, understand customers, make decisions and solve problems.

AI may help write a marketing post, but someone still has to decide the strategy.

Software may help calculate costs, but someone still has to understand what the numbers mean.

Online platforms may help sell products, but someone still has to know the customer.

Business Studies helps students develop that wider understanding.

A Subject for the Real World

Business Studies is not just about entrepreneurs, profits and boardrooms. It is about people, choices, risks, opportunities and responsibility.

It helps students understand the organisations they will work for, the companies they will buy from and perhaps the businesses they may one day create.

It gives them confidence. It gives them vocabulary. It gives them practical insight. Most importantly, it helps them connect school learning with the real world.

For my students, the chance to take on real roles in an actual company gives them experience that is difficult to gain elsewhere. They are not just learning about business. They are learning how business feels.

They learn that decisions matter.

They learn that teamwork matters.

They learn that communication matters.

They learn that responsibility matters.

And those lessons stay with them long after the exam is over.

Conclusion: Business Studies Opens Doors

Business is everywhere. Almost every career, organisation and workplace involves business thinking in some form.

That is why Business Studies is such a strong choice for young people. It gives them practical knowledge, employability skills and a better understanding of the world around them.

But the subject becomes even more powerful when students do not just study business — they practise it.

When young people are trusted with real roles and real responsibilities, they grow. They become more confident, more employable and more aware of what it takes to turn ideas into action.

Business Studies is not just a school subject.

It is preparation for life.

13 June 2026

Why Computing Is One of the Best A-Level or BTEC Choices a Student Can Make

 


Why Computing Is One of the Best A-Level or BTEC Choices a Student Can Make

The Subject That Quietly Opens Doors Everywhere

Every year, students have to make difficult choices about A-Levels, BTECs and future pathways. Some subjects feel obvious. Biology if you are thinking about medicine. Maths if you are aiming for engineering. Business if you are interested in management or enterprise.

But one subject that is still too often overlooked is Computing.

Computing is one of the best A-Level or BTEC courses a student can choose because it opens doors into almost every modern industry. It is not just for people who want to sit in a dark room writing code all day. It is not just for “computer geeks”. It is not just for boys. It is a subject for problem-solvers, designers, organisers, analysts, creators, engineers, entrepreneurs and people who want to understand how the modern world actually works.

The strange thing is that while computers run almost every part of modern life, not enough students choose Computing. Many still see it as a narrow subject, when in reality it may be one of the broadest and most useful choices available.

Computing Is Not Just About Programming

One of the biggest misunderstandings about Computing is that it is only about learning to program.

Programming is important, of course. Students may learn Python, Java, SQL, web technologies, algorithms, data structures and problem-solving techniques. But Computing goes much further than typing code into a screen.

A good Computing course teaches students how systems work. It helps them understand networks, databases, cyber security, hardware, software, data, logic, artificial intelligence, user interfaces and the way information moves around the world.

This matters because nearly every organisation now depends on computer systems. Hospitals use them to manage patient records and diagnostic equipment. Shops use them for stock control, online ordering and customer data. Banks use them to protect money and detect fraud. Schools use them for learning platforms, administration and communication. Sailing clubs use them for websites, race results, livestreaming, safety systems and social media.

Even a small business now needs websites, online booking, databases, accounts software, digital marketing, video editing, data storage, backups, cyber security and social media. Computing is not a separate industry sitting in the corner. It is built into everything.

The World Needs People Who Understand Computer Systems

We often hear that “AI will change everything”. It probably will. But AI does not remove the need for people who understand computing. In many ways, it increases the need.

AI systems need to be designed, trained, tested, managed, checked, secured and used responsibly. Someone needs to understand the data going in, the results coming out, the risks, the limitations and the ethical issues. Someone needs to know when a computer system is helping and when it is producing nonsense very confidently.

This is where Computing becomes such a powerful subject. It gives students a foundation for understanding the technology rather than simply using it.

There is a big difference between being a passenger and being able to look under the bonnet.

A student who understands computing can ask better questions:

Why has the system made that decision?
Where has the data come from?
Is the system secure?
Could there be bias in the algorithm?
What happens if the network fails?
How do we protect personal information?
Can this task be automated safely?
How do we design software that ordinary people can actually use?

These are not just technical questions. They are business, ethical and social questions too.

A-Level Computing and BTEC Computing: Different Routes, Similar Opportunities

Students often ask whether A-Level Computing or a BTEC in Computing, IT or Digital Technologies is the better route. The answer depends on the student.

A-Level Computer Science is usually more theoretical and academic. It suits students who enjoy logic, algorithms, programming, mathematical thinking and understanding systems in depth. It can fit very well with A-Level Maths, Physics, Further Maths, Business or Design Technology.

A BTEC route is often more vocational and project-based. It may suit students who enjoy building things, completing assignments, working through practical scenarios and applying computing to real-world problems. BTEC courses can include areas such as website development, databases, cyber security, networking, software development and digital project work.

Neither route should be seen as second best. They are different styles of learning. Some students thrive on exams and theory. Others produce their best work through coursework, projects and practical application.

The important point is that both can lead towards university, apprenticeships, employment, higher technical qualifications and specialist training.

Computing Goes With Almost Every Subject

One of the best things about Computing is that it combines well with many other subjects.

With Maths, it can lead towards software engineering, data science, artificial intelligence, finance, cryptography and research.

With Physics, it can support engineering, robotics, electronics, simulations, aerospace, renewable energy and scientific modelling.

With Business, it can lead towards digital marketing, systems analysis, project management, e-commerce and technology entrepreneurship.

With Art or Design, it can support game design, animation, web design, user experience, digital media and creative technology.

With Psychology or Sociology, it can connect with human-computer interaction, online behaviour, social media, cybercrime and the impact of technology on society.

With Biology or Chemistry, it can lead towards bioinformatics, medical technology, laboratory automation, data analysis and environmental modelling.

Computing is not a subject that closes options down. It keeps them open.

The “Geek Subject” Myth

One of the saddest things about Computing is that many students avoid it because of its image.

It is sometimes seen as a subject for boys who already build computers, play games, write code at home and know the difference between a graphics card and a network switch before they arrive in the classroom.

That image is damaging because it puts off students who might be excellent at Computing.

You do not need to have spent your childhood taking apart computers to succeed. You do not need to be a gaming expert. You do not need to be loud, overconfident or already fluent in programming.

Some of the best Computing students are careful, methodical thinkers. Some are creative designers. Some are excellent communicators. Some are good at spotting patterns. Some enjoy organising information. Some are good at explaining difficult ideas clearly.

Computing needs many types of people.

In fact, one of the biggest problems in technology is that there are not enough different voices involved in designing the systems we all use. If computer systems are used by everyone, then they should be created by a wide range of people too.

Why More Girls Should Consider Computing

Computing is still too often male dominated. That does not mean girls are less capable. It means too many girls are being put off before they even begin.

Sometimes this starts early. Boys may be more encouraged to play with technology, gaming, coding clubs or electronics. Girls may not always see enough role models. Some students may look around a classroom, see very few girls, and quietly decide that the subject is “not for them”.

That is a terrible waste of talent.

The modern world needs women in software development, cyber security, AI, data science, digital health, education technology, business systems, games, robotics and user experience design. Technology affects everyone, so everyone should have the opportunity to shape it.

A girl who is good at problem solving, communication, design, maths, organisation or creative thinking may be exactly the sort of person Computing needs.

The subject should not belong to one gender. It belongs to anyone curious enough to ask, “How does this work?” and determined enough to keep going when the first version does not quite work.

Computing Teaches Problem Solving

One of the most valuable things about Computing is that it teaches students how to solve problems.

In many subjects, students can sometimes learn a method and repeat it. Computing is different. A program rarely works perfectly the first time. A network problem may have several possible causes. A database may fail because one small detail has been missed. A website may look fine on one screen and terrible on another.

This can be frustrating, but it is also brilliant training.

Computing teaches students to break a problem down into smaller parts. It teaches them to test ideas, find errors, improve solutions and think logically. It teaches resilience because computers are wonderfully unforgiving. They do exactly what you told them to do, not what you meant to tell them to do.

That is why debugging is such a useful life skill. You try something. It fails. You look carefully. You test one thing at a time. You find the problem. You fix it. Then you improve the solution.

That is not just Computing. That is engineering, science, business and life.

Practical Examples: Where Computing Appears in Real Life

In my own work, Computing is everywhere.

When teaching online, the lesson depends on cameras, microphones, video switching, network connections, file storage, displays, tablets and software. A practical science lesson may involve sensors, data logging, graphs, spreadsheets and video close-ups. A good online lesson is not just a Zoom call. It is a computer system working properly.

When creating videos, Computing appears again. Editing software, audio processing, colour correction, file formats, backups, YouTube uploads, thumbnails, captions and analytics all rely on digital skills.

When managing a small business, Computing is just as important. Websites, SEO, social media posts, booking systems, accounts, email, cloud storage and digital resources all need planning and maintenance.

Even in sailing, Computing has become part of the story. Weather apps, GPS, digital charts, race timing, camera boats, livestreaming, action cameras and social media promotion all rely on technology.

This is why Computing is such a useful subject. It is not limited to one room in a school. It follows students into almost every career and hobby.

The Career Opportunities Are Enormous

Computing can lead to a wide range of careers, including:

Software developer
Cyber security analyst
Data analyst
AI engineer
Network engineer
Systems analyst
Games developer
Web developer
Database administrator
Cloud computing specialist
IT project manager
Digital designer
Robotics engineer
Technical support specialist
Digital marketing analyst
Business systems consultant
Teacher or trainer in computing

But even this list is too narrow. Computing skills are valuable in medicine, engineering, law, finance, environmental science, education, media, transport, manufacturing, retail and public services.

Many future jobs will not have “computer” in the title, but they will still require digital confidence.

A student who understands computing is not just preparing for one career. They are preparing for a world where almost every career is being changed by technology.

AI Makes Computing More Important, Not Less

Some students may wonder whether AI will make learning Computing unnecessary. After all, if AI can help write code, do we still need to learn how to code?

The answer is yes, absolutely.

Calculators did not remove the need to understand maths. Spellcheck did not remove the need to write clearly. Sat nav did not remove the need to understand where you are going. AI will not remove the need to understand Computing.

In fact, AI makes understanding Computing more important.

A student who knows nothing about Computing may simply accept what an AI tool produces. A student who understands Computing can check it, question it, adapt it, improve it and use it safely.

AI may help with routine tasks, but people still need to understand the problem, design the system, check the output and make responsible decisions.

The future will not belong only to people who can use AI. It will belong to people who can understand, control and apply it intelligently.

Computing Builds Confidence for the Modern Workplace

One of the hidden benefits of studying Computing is confidence.

Many people use technology every day but are secretly frightened of it. They worry about pressing the wrong button, breaking something, losing files or not understanding technical language. Computing helps remove that fear.

Students learn that systems can be understood. Networks can be diagnosed. Programs can be corrected. Data can be organised. Errors can be found. Security can be improved.

That confidence is useful in every workplace.

Employers value people who are not afraid of technology. They value people who can learn new systems quickly, think logically and solve problems independently. They value people who can bridge the gap between technical experts and ordinary users.

Computing gives students that bridge.

It Is Not Always Easy — But That Is the Point

Computing can be challenging. Programming requires patience. Algorithms can feel abstract. Theory topics such as binary, logic gates, networks, databases and processor architecture can take time to understand.

But that challenge is part of its value.

Students should not choose subjects only because they seem easy. They should choose subjects that help them grow, open doors and develop useful skills.

Computing rewards persistence. The moment a program finally works, a website loads correctly, a database query returns the right result, or a network problem is solved, students get a real sense of achievement.

It is a subject where mistakes are not failures. They are part of the process.

Why Students Should Seriously Consider Computing

If a student enjoys puzzles, Computing may suit them.

If they like building things, Computing may suit them.

If they are interested in AI, cyber security, games, business, science, engineering, design, media or data, Computing may suit them.

If they are not sure what career they want yet, Computing may still be a very good choice because it keeps so many pathways open.

The important thing is not whether they already see themselves as a “computer person”. The important thing is whether they are willing to learn how modern systems work.

Computing is not just about computers. It is about problem solving, creativity, logic, communication, responsibility and the future of work.

Conclusion: Computing Is a Future-Proof Choice

Choosing A-Level Computer Science or a BTEC in Computing is not just choosing a school subject. It is choosing to understand the systems that shape modern life.

As AI grows, as businesses become more digital, as cyber security becomes more important, and as every industry relies more heavily on data and automation, Computing will only become more valuable.

We need more students to see Computing for what it really is: not a geek subject, not a boys’ subject, and not just a programming course, but a powerful route into exciting, creative and well-paid careers.

For students choosing their next step, Computing deserves serious consideration.

The future will be built with technology. The real question is whether students want simply to use it — or help shape it.

12 June 2026

Why A-Level Chemistry Is Such a Good Choice

 


Why A-Level Chemistry Is Such a Good Choice

Choosing A-Levels can feel rather like standing in front of a very large menu when you are not quite sure what you are hungry for.

Some students know exactly where they are heading. Medicine. Engineering. Veterinary science. Biochemistry. Physics. Law. Architecture. Teaching. Research. For them, the choices are often fairly obvious.

But many students do not know.

At 16, that is perfectly normal. In fact, I sometimes think it is slightly unreasonable to expect students to make decisions that may shape their university options and career routes when they have only just finished their GCSEs.

This is where A-Level Chemistry becomes such a useful choice.

It is not the easiest A-Level. Let us be honest about that straight away. But it is one of the most flexible, respected and useful A-Levels a student can take. If you want to keep a science, keep your options open, and study a subject that connects beautifully with many others, Chemistry is very hard to beat.

Chemistry Sits in the Middle of the Sciences

One of the reasons Chemistry is such a good A-Level is that it sits between Physics and Biology.

Physics often attracts students who enjoy mathematics, forces, energy, electricity, mechanics and abstract models of the universe. Biology attracts students who enjoy living systems, cells, organisms, physiology, ecology and the huge complexity of life.

Chemistry lives between the two.

It explains how atoms join together, how reactions happen, how medicines work, how batteries produce electricity, how fuels release energy, how materials are made, how fertilisers improve crop growth, and how pollutants damage the environment.

It is a science of matter, change and explanation.

That means Chemistry combines practical work, problem solving, patterns, equations, logic and factual understanding. It has enough mathematics to make it rigorous, but it is not as mathematically demanding as Physics. It has enough factual content to make it rich and detailed, but it usually does not have the same enormous learning load as Biology.

For many students, that balance is exactly what they need.

Less Maths Than Physics — But Still Enough to Matter

One of the common worries students have when choosing science A-Levels is the maths.

A-Level Physics has a significant mathematical element. Students need to be comfortable rearranging formulae, using vectors, interpreting graphs, handling mechanics problems, working with electricity equations and thinking very logically about abstract situations.

Chemistry certainly includes maths, but it is usually more contained.

Students will need to handle moles, concentrations, titrations, pH calculations, equilibrium constants, rates, enthalpy changes and electrode potentials. These calculations matter, and they do require care. However, the maths is often more directly linked to chemical ideas and practical measurements.

For example, a student may calculate the concentration of an acid from a titration, then connect that calculation to what actually happened in the conical flask. They may calculate an enthalpy change, then link it to bonds being broken and made. They may calculate pH, then understand why a buffer resists changes in acidity.

The maths is not just maths for its own sake. It is maths with chemical meaning.

That makes Chemistry a very good choice for students who are reasonably comfortable with GCSE Maths but do not necessarily want the full mathematical intensity of A-Level Physics.

Less Memorisation Than Biology — But Still Plenty to Learn

Biology is a wonderful subject, but students often underestimate just how much there is to learn.

At A-Level, Biology becomes a subject of detail. Cells, membranes, enzymes, DNA, protein synthesis, immunity, respiration, photosynthesis, homeostasis, ecology, genetics, evolution and whole-organism physiology all need to be understood accurately.

Chemistry has content too, of course. Students must learn mechanisms, definitions, colours of transition metal ions, tests for gases, organic reactions, bonding models, periodic trends and analytical techniques. But the subject often feels more pattern-based.

Once students understand why atoms behave as they do, many parts of Chemistry begin to link together.

Why does sodium react vigorously with water?
Why does chlorine form chloride ions?
Why do alcohols behave differently from carboxylic acids?
Why does increasing temperature change the rate of reaction?
Why does a catalyst lower activation energy?
Why do some molecules dissolve in water and others do not?

Chemistry rewards students who can see patterns.

There is still learning to do, but it is not simply a giant list of facts. The facts begin to form a structure. Once that structure is understood, the subject becomes far more manageable.

Chemistry Keeps So Many Doors Open

One of the strongest arguments for taking A-Level Chemistry is that it supports a wide range of future choices.

Chemistry is especially important for students considering:

Medicine
Dentistry
Veterinary science
Pharmacy
Biochemistry
Biomedical science
Chemical engineering
Materials science
Environmental science
Forensic science
Natural sciences
Food science
Pharmacology
Neuroscience
Physiotherapy and other healthcare routes

It is also useful alongside Maths, Biology, Physics, Geography, Psychology and even Economics.

Chemistry works well in many combinations.

Chemistry with Biology is ideal for medicine, dentistry, veterinary science, pharmacy and biomedical routes.

Chemistry with Maths is powerful for chemical engineering, materials science, physical chemistry, environmental modelling and many technical degrees.

Chemistry with Physics keeps open engineering, materials, energy and physical sciences.

Chemistry with Geography can lead towards environmental science, climate science, pollution studies and sustainability.

Chemistry with Psychology or Sociology can support students interested in healthcare, neuroscience, behaviour, medicine, education or public health.

This is why Chemistry is such a useful “keep your options open” subject.

It is a serious academic A-Level that universities understand and respect.

Chemistry Is a Practical Subject

One of the great strengths of Chemistry is that it is not just theory on a page.

It is a practical subject.

Students can see reactions happen. They can measure temperature changes, carry out titrations, make crystals, test gases, analyse unknown substances and observe colour changes. Chemistry has the satisfying quality of allowing students to connect written equations to real substances in real test tubes.

In my own teaching, I find that Chemistry comes alive when students actually do the practical work.

A titration is not just a diagram in a textbook. It is a burette, a pipette, a conical flask, an indicator, careful swirling, and the slightly tense moment when one final drop changes the colour.

Electrolysis is not just ions moving to electrodes. It is bubbles forming, metals appearing, gases being collected and tested.

Organic chemistry is not just reaction pathways. It is smells, reflux, distillation, purification and the idea that molecules can be built step by step.

This practical side makes Chemistry memorable. It also helps students understand the subject more deeply, because they are not just reading about reactions — they are seeing them happen.

Chemistry Teaches Problem Solving

A good Chemistry question is often like a puzzle.

You may be given a set of observations, some data, a reaction scheme or an unknown compound. The challenge is to work out what is happening.

What functional group is present?
Which ion caused the precipitate?
Why did the rate increase?
Which step is the rate-determining step?
What does the pH tell us?
Why is this reaction exothermic?
Which mechanism fits the evidence?

These are not simply memory questions. They require students to link ideas together.

That is one of the reasons Chemistry is so valuable. It teaches students how to analyse information, spot patterns, use evidence and build an explanation.

These skills are useful far beyond Chemistry itself.

Chemistry Helps Students Understand the Modern World

Chemistry is everywhere.

It is in medicines, batteries, plastics, fuels, fertilisers, cleaning products, food, paints, cosmetics, water treatment, pollution control, materials, recycling and renewable energy.

When students study Chemistry, they begin to understand the world at a molecular level.

They can understand why lithium-ion batteries matter.
They can understand why carbon dioxide affects climate.
They can understand how drugs interact with the body.
They can understand why fertilisers increase crop yields but can also damage rivers.
They can understand why plastics are useful, persistent and problematic.
They can understand how catalysts make industrial processes more efficient.
They can understand why water hardness causes limescale.

Chemistry gives students a set of tools for understanding modern life.

In a world dealing with climate change, pollution, medical advances, food security, energy storage and resource shortages, Chemistry is not an old-fashioned subject. It is central to many of the problems we need to solve.

Chemistry Pairs Well With Almost Everything

Some A-Levels are very specialised. They are excellent choices for particular routes, but they may not combine quite so easily with other subjects.

Chemistry is different.

It can be part of a strongly scientific set of A-Levels, such as Chemistry, Biology and Maths.

It can sit in a broader academic set, such as Chemistry, Psychology and Geography.

It can support a future in healthcare, engineering, environmental science, research, teaching or industry.

For students who are not yet sure what they want to do, Chemistry can be a very sensible anchor subject. It keeps a science in the mix without forcing the student too early into one narrow path.

That matters.

Many students change their minds between Year 11 and Year 13. A subject like Chemistry gives them room to grow.

Chemistry Is Challenging — But Not Impossible

It would be unfair to pretend Chemistry is easy.

The step up from GCSE is real.

Students need to become more precise. They need to use proper terminology. They need to understand bonding in more depth, handle calculations carefully, learn organic mechanisms, explain trends and apply ideas to unfamiliar questions.

But the subject is very learnable.

Students who do well in A-Level Chemistry usually do not rely on last-minute revision. They build understanding steadily. They practise calculations. They learn definitions accurately. They draw mechanisms again and again until they become familiar. They correct mistakes. They ask why.

In Chemistry, small gaps can become big problems if they are ignored. But with regular work, those gaps can be closed.

The students who succeed are often not the ones who find it easy at the beginning. They are the ones who keep going, practise carefully and learn from each mistake.

Who Should Consider A-Level Chemistry?

A-Level Chemistry may be a very good choice if you:

Enjoyed GCSE Chemistry
Like practical science
Want to keep a science option open
Are interested in medicine, healthcare, environmental science or materials
Prefer a subject with logic and patterns
Are happy doing some maths but do not want Physics-level maths
Want a respected academic subject
Are not yet sure what you want to do after sixth form

It may not be the best choice if you dislike science practicals, avoid calculations completely, or do not want to learn detailed explanations. Chemistry needs effort and accuracy.

But for many students, it is an excellent compromise: challenging, useful, respected and flexible.

My Personal View as a Tutor

As a tutor, I often see students choosing A-Levels with a mixture of ambition, uncertainty and panic.

Some choose subjects because their friends are doing them. Some choose what sounds impressive. Some choose what they think will be easy. Some are trying to keep parents, teachers and future universities happy all at once.

Chemistry is one of the subjects I often recommend students seriously consider, particularly when they want to keep science open but are not sure whether Biology or Physics is the right fit.

It is demanding, but it is not impossibly abstract. It has calculations, but it is not dominated by advanced maths. It has facts to learn, but it also has patterns and explanations. It has practical work, problem solving and real-world relevance.

For the right student, Chemistry can become the subject that holds everything together.

Conclusion: Chemistry Keeps the Future Open

A-Level Chemistry is one of the best choices for students who want a strong, respected and flexible science A-Level.

It sits beautifully between Biology and Physics. It contains enough maths to be rigorous, but usually less than Physics. It contains detailed knowledge, but generally not the same huge learning load as Biology. It links with medicine, engineering, environmental science, materials, pharmacy, biochemistry and many other routes.

Most importantly, it teaches students how to think.

It teaches them to look beneath the surface of the world and ask: what is actually happening here?

Why did that reaction happen?
Why did that colour change?
Why does this material behave in that way?
Why does this medicine work?
Why does this pollutant matter?
Why does this battery store energy?

For students choosing A-Levels and feeling unsure, Chemistry can be a wise choice. It keeps doors open, builds powerful skills and helps explain the modern world.

It is not the easy option.

But it may be one of the most useful ones.


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.


Summer Chafer — The Small Brown Beetle That Most People Walk Past

  Summer Chafer — The Small Brown Beetle That Most People Walk Past “Not every clumsy brown beetle is a May bug — this one is its smaller su...