18 June 2026

What Makes Our Private Tuition Different?

 


What Makes Our Private Tuition Different?

More Than a Tutor with a Textbook

There are many private tutors who do excellent work. Some travel to students’ homes, sit at the kitchen table, open a textbook, go through questions, explain a topic, and set a bit of homework.

That can work for some students.

But it is not what we do.

At Hemel Private Tuition, students come to us because we have built something very different: a proper teaching environment with a classroom, a laboratory, years of exam resources, specialist science equipment, and online video studios designed for serious teaching.

The difference is simple.

We do not just talk about science.

We show it.

Even better, whenever possible, the student does it for themselves.

A Proper Classroom Makes a Difference

Learning at home can be difficult. There are distractions everywhere: phones, television, pets, family noise, siblings, doorbells, and the general chaos of daily life.

When a student comes to a dedicated classroom, the atmosphere changes.

They are no longer squeezing tuition into a corner of the house. They are entering a space designed for learning. There is a board, a desk, equipment, resources, worked examples, past papers, models, diagrams, and room to think.

That matters.

Students often behave differently in a proper teaching space. They concentrate better. They take the work more seriously. They are more willing to ask questions. They also start to see tuition not as “a bit of extra help” but as a focused part of their education.

A good learning environment does not replace good teaching, but it certainly supports it.

A Laboratory, Not Just a Lesson

One of the biggest differences is the laboratory.

Science is not meant to live only on a printed page.

Physics, Chemistry and Biology are practical subjects. They are about observing, measuring, testing, comparing, predicting, recording, analysing and explaining. Yet many students arrive having done surprisingly little practical work themselves.

They may have watched a demonstration. They may have seen a video. They may have copied notes from the board. They may even know the “method” for a required practical.

But knowing the words is not the same as understanding the experiment.

In our laboratory, students can see the apparatus, use the equipment, collect data, make mistakes, repeat measurements, and understand why the practical matters.

That is often where the learning really begins.

Why Demonstration Is Often Better Than Explanation

After more than 40 years of teaching, one lesson becomes very clear: simply talking at a student is often not enough.

A student may nod politely. They may even write down the correct definition. But that does not always mean they truly understand the idea.

Take electrical resistance, for example.

You can explain current, potential difference and resistance using equations. You can write:

V = IR

You can rearrange the formula. You can calculate the missing value.

But when a student builds a circuit, changes the resistor, sees the ammeter reading change, notices the brightness of a lamp alter, and plots the graph, the idea becomes much more real.

The same is true across science.

In Chemistry, a student can read about displacement reactions. But when they see a metal placed into a solution and observe the colour change, the reaction is no longer just a sentence in a revision guide.

In Biology, a student can memorise the parts of a microscope. But when they focus a real slide, adjust the light, change the magnification and suddenly see cells clearly, the subject becomes alive.

In Physics, a student can learn about waves from diagrams. But when they see waves reflected, refracted, diffracted or measured using real equipment, the diagrams begin to make sense.

The Student Needs to Do the Experiment

Demonstrations are useful, but students learn even more when they do the practical work themselves.

That is because practical work forces students to think.

They have to set up the apparatus correctly. They have to decide what to measure. They have to notice what has gone wrong. They have to repeat readings. They have to consider uncertainty. They have to decide whether their results are sensible.

This is where real scientific thinking develops.

A student who has only memorised a practical may write a method in an exam. A student who has actually done the practical is far more likely to understand why each step matters.

That difference can be crucial.

For example, in a GCSE Chemistry titration, it is one thing to write “add the acid from the burette until the indicator changes colour.” It is quite another to realise how slowly the acid must be added near the end point, why the flask needs swirling, and why one extra drop can spoil the result.

In Physics, students may learn that results should be repeated. But when they actually get one reading that is clearly wrong, they understand why repeated results matter.

In Biology, students may learn about osmosis. But when they cut potato cylinders, measure them, leave them in different sugar solutions and compare the results, they see that osmosis is not just a definition. It is something measurable.

Past Papers Going Back Decades

Another important difference is the depth of exam experience and resources.

We have exam papers going back decades.

Of course, syllabuses change. Specifications are updated. Exam boards alter their wording. New topics appear. Some topics disappear. Question styles evolve.

But the science and the maths do not suddenly change.

Forces are still forces. Electricity is still electricity. Algebra is still algebra. Chemical bonding is still chemical bonding. Enzymes are still enzymes.

Older exam questions can still be extremely useful when chosen carefully. They often test the same underlying ideas in slightly different ways. That helps students move beyond simply learning the latest mark scheme phrase and towards actually understanding the subject.

Students need practice, but not just any practice. They need carefully chosen practice that reveals misunderstandings.

A good past paper question does not just test what a student knows. It exposes what they do not yet understand.

Understanding the Question Behind the Question

One of the advantages of long teaching experience is being able to spot what is really going wrong.

Sometimes a student says, “I don’t understand Physics.”

But the real problem may be algebra.

Sometimes they say, “I can’t do Chemistry calculations.”

But the issue may be ratios, significant figures, or rearranging equations.

Sometimes they say, “I know the Biology, but I lose marks.”

The issue may be exam technique, lack of detail, weak command words, or not using the correct scientific vocabulary.

After teaching for many years, you begin to recognise these patterns quickly.

A student does not always need the whole topic taught again from the beginning. Sometimes they need the missing link. Sometimes they need the practical demonstration. Sometimes they need the mathematics behind the science. Sometimes they need to see the same idea from a different angle.

That is where experienced teaching makes a real difference.

Science Equipment Changes the Lesson

Having proper equipment changes what can happen in a lesson.

A lesson on motion can include real measurements, light gates, trolleys, ramps and graphs.

A lesson on waves can include ripple tanks, sound equipment, oscilloscopes, microwave apparatus or slow-motion video.

A lesson on electricity can include circuits built and tested by the student.

A lesson on radioactivity can include real detection equipment and safe demonstrations.

A lesson on microscopy can involve students preparing, viewing and interpreting slides.

A lesson on energy changes can involve measuring temperature changes and calculating the energy transferred.

This equipment does not exist to make lessons look impressive. It exists because students understand more when they can connect theory to reality.

Science equipment gives students something to see, touch, measure and question.

That is powerful.

Online Tuition from a Proper Video Studio

Some students live too far away to travel to us. Others prefer online tuition because of time, transport, illness, anxiety or convenience.

Online tuition can be excellent, but only if it is done properly.

Simply pointing a laptop webcam at a tutor’s face is very limited. It may be fine for conversation, but it is not ideal for teaching practical science, diagrams, worked solutions or close-up demonstrations.

That is why we use dedicated video studios with multi-camera setups.

This allows students online to see much more than a normal video call would allow. They can see the tutor, the board, the apparatus, the experiment, close-up views, and sometimes slow-motion footage when needed.

For science teaching, that matters enormously.

A camera can show the reading on a meter. A close-up can show a colour change. A visualiser can show a worked calculation. A second camera can show the whole experimental arrangement. Recorded or slow-motion footage can reveal something that happens too quickly to notice in real time.

Online students are not simply watching a talking head.

They are being taught through a proper production system designed to help them understand.

From GCSE to A-Level: Building Real Understanding

At GCSE, many students can get by for a while by memorising facts, definitions and methods.

At A-Level, that is much harder.

A-Level Science and Maths demand deeper understanding. Students need to connect ideas, apply knowledge to unfamiliar problems, interpret data, explain patterns, and use mathematical reasoning.

This is where practical experience becomes even more important.

A student who has physically investigated internal resistance, measured rates of reaction, used a microscope properly, plotted experimental data, or worked through real measurements is often in a stronger position than a student who has only memorised notes.

They are not just repeating information.

They are thinking like a scientist.

That is what we want to develop.

Why “Talking Through the Topic” Is Not Enough

There is a place for explanation. A good explanation can unlock a difficult idea. But explanation alone is rarely enough.

Students need to practise.

They need to answer questions.

They need to make mistakes.

They need feedback.

They need to compare methods.

They need to see why an answer is incomplete.

They need to understand what an examiner is really looking for.

They need to connect practical work, theory and exam technique.

That is why our approach combines several things:

Clear teaching
Practical demonstration
Hands-on experiment work
Past paper practice
Mathematical support
Exam technique
Detailed feedback
Revision structure

No single part is enough on its own. The strength is in combining them.

A Personal Reflection: Why I Still Believe in Practical Teaching

After more than 40 years in teaching, I still believe that students learn best when ideas become real.

I have seen students struggle with a concept for weeks, then suddenly understand it after one well-chosen demonstration.

I have seen students who thought they were “bad at science” become confident when they were allowed to handle the apparatus and investigate for themselves.

I have seen students realise that an equation is not just something to memorise, but a description of what actually happens.

That moment is one of the great pleasures of teaching.

It is the moment when the subject stops being a set of notes and becomes something the student can understand.

The Real Difference

So what makes our private tuition different?

It is not just one thing.

It is the combination of a proper classroom, a working laboratory, extensive exam resources, specialist equipment, online video studios, and decades of teaching experience.

It is the belief that students should not merely be told science.

They should see it.

They should do it.

They should measure it.

They should question it.

They should understand it.

Private tuition should not be a weaker version of school. Done properly, it can offer something highly focused, practical and personal.

That is what we aim to provide.

Conclusion: Understanding Comes from Experience

Science and Maths are not subjects that can be mastered by passive listening alone.

Students need explanation, but they also need experience. They need to see what happens, handle equipment, solve problems, practise exam questions, and build confidence step by step.

A textbook can be useful. A tutor can be helpful. A past paper can be powerful.

But when all of that is combined with a real classroom, a real laboratory, real equipment and experienced teaching, the learning becomes much stronger.

That is what makes Hemel Private Tuition different.

We do not simply help students get through the syllabus.

We help them understand the subject.

17 June 2026

Physics Without Maths: Like Trying to Sail Without a Rudder

 


Physics Without Maths: Like Trying to Sail Without a Rudder

Every year, I meet students who have chosen A-level Physics but have not chosen A-level Maths.

And, to be honest, it always worries me.

Not because those students are not capable. Many of them are bright, curious, hard-working and genuinely interested in how the world works. They like space, engines, electricity, particles, sound, medical physics, engineering, electronics, aircraft, boats and the strange invisible forces that hold everything together.

The problem is not their interest.

The problem is that Physics at A-level is not simply a subject about “knowing facts”. It is a subject about using mathematical models to describe the universe.

Without enough Maths, Physics can quickly become a frustrating experience. Students may understand the idea in words, but then fall apart when they have to rearrange an equation, interpret a graph, resolve a force, use radians, handle powers of ten, calculate uncertainty, or understand why a gradient has a physical meaning.

Physics without Maths is a little like trying to sail without a rudder. You may still be in the boat. You may still have enthusiasm. You may even know where you want to go. But steering becomes very difficult indeed.


Physics Is Not Just a Collection of Interesting Facts

At GCSE, many students can do quite well in Physics by learning definitions, remembering equations and practising common question types.

They learn that:

  • force equals mass times acceleration
  • voltage equals current times resistance
  • energy can be transferred usefully or wasted
  • waves can be reflected, refracted and diffracted
  • radioactive materials decay over time

This is useful. It gives students a foundation.

But A-level Physics changes the rules.

Suddenly, the equations are not just things to substitute numbers into. They become tools for modelling situations. Students need to know where an equation comes from, when it applies, what assumptions are being made and what the result actually means.

A student may learn:

v = u + at

But then they have to decide whether it applies to a falling object, a trolley on a ramp, a projectile, or a car slowing down. They must select the correct direction, choose signs carefully, convert units, rearrange the equation and often combine it with another equation.

That is where many students who have not taken Maths begin to struggle.

They do not fail because they are “bad at Physics”.

They struggle because the language of A-level Physics is mathematical.


The Moment Students Realise Maths Was Essential

One of the difficult moments in teaching comes when a student says something like:

“I understand the Physics, but I just can’t do the Maths.”

The trouble is that, at A-level, the two are not separate.

If you cannot rearrange equations confidently, you cannot reliably solve mechanics problems.

If you cannot understand gradients and areas under graphs, you cannot properly interpret motion, electricity, waves or fields.

If you are frightened by logarithms and exponentials, capacitors and radioactive decay become much harder.

If you are unsure about trigonometry, resolving forces becomes a guessing game.

If powers of ten make you nervous, atomic physics and astronomy become a minefield.

Physics is full of ideas, but the ideas are carried by Maths.

A student may understand that a capacitor discharges over time. That is a good conceptual start. But A-level Physics then asks them to analyse an exponential decay curve, understand time constants, use logarithmic graphs and interpret experimental data. At that point, the Maths is not an optional extra. It is the method by which the Physics is understood.


The Core Problem: GCSE Maths Is Often Not Enough

A student who has achieved a good GCSE Maths grade may assume they are ready for A-level Physics.

Sometimes they are.

But often, they are only ready for the first few weeks.

GCSE Maths gives students a foundation, but A-level Physics demands a much more fluent use of that foundation. The challenge is not always advanced content. Sometimes it is speed, confidence and flexibility.

A GCSE student may be able to rearrange:

V = IR

But can they rearrange:


to make (g) the subject?

Can they look at a graph of force against extension and immediately know that the area under the graph represents work done?

Can they understand why the gradient of a displacement-time graph gives velocity, and why the gradient of a velocity-time graph gives acceleration?

Can they work with:


E = hf

when the frequency is written in standard form and Planck’s constant is a tiny number?

Can they use sine and cosine correctly when a force is acting at an angle?

This is where GCSE competence has to become A-level fluency.

And that fluency usually comes from studying A-level Maths alongside Physics.


What About Core Maths or the Level 3 Certificate?

Some schools place students doing Physics without A-level Maths onto a Level 3 Mathematical Studies or Core Maths course.

I can see the intention.

It is better than doing no Maths at all. It can help students keep their numerical skills alive. It can support statistics, graphs, percentages, estimation, financial Maths and problem-solving. For many students, especially those taking Biology, Geography, Psychology, Business or other numerate subjects, Core Maths can be very valuable.

But for A-level Physics, I do not think it is enough.

That is not a criticism of Core Maths. It is simply not designed to be the same thing as A-level Maths. It does not give the same depth of algebra, calculus, mechanics, trigonometry and mathematical modelling that a serious Physics student needs.

A student trying to survive A-level Physics with Core Maths alone may manage some of the calculation work, especially early on, but they are likely to hit difficulties when the course becomes more abstract.

The issue is not whether Core Maths is useful.

The issue is whether it is sufficient.

For A-level Physics, I would normally say no.


The Maths Topics Physics Students Really Need

When I teach Physics students who have not taken Maths, I often have to build a rescue bridge. We cannot teach the whole of A-level Maths from scratch, but we can target the mathematical skills that unlock the Physics.

The essential areas include:

Rearranging Formulae

This is one of the most common weaknesses.

Students may know the equation but cannot make the correct variable the subject. In Physics, this matters constantly. You may need to rearrange equations in mechanics, electricity, waves, thermal physics, fields and nuclear physics.

A student who cannot rearrange confidently loses marks even when they understand the concept.

Standard Form and Units

Physics moves from the microscopic to the astronomical.

Students deal with electrons, atoms, planets, galaxies, wavelengths, frequencies, masses, charges and energies. Numbers may be incredibly small or unimaginably large.

A student must be comfortable with:


  • micro, milli, kilo, mega and giga
  • unit conversion
  • significant figures

Many Physics errors are not conceptual errors. They are unit errors.

Graphs

Graphs are everywhere in Physics.

Students must understand:

  • gradients
  • intercepts
  • areas under graphs
  • proportional relationships
  • inverse relationships
  • straight-line transformations
  • experimental uncertainty

A graph is not just a picture. In Physics, a graph is often the experiment speaking.

The gradient may be resistance. The area may be energy. The intercept may reveal a systematic error. A curve may show that a relationship is not linear.

Students who treat graphs as decorative diagrams miss much of the Physics.

Trigonometry and Vectors

Forces do not always act neatly to the left or right.

They act at angles. Boats drift sideways. Projectiles move horizontally and vertically at the same time. Electric and gravitational fields have direction. Momentum has direction. Velocity has direction.

Students need to understand components.

That means sine, cosine, right-angled triangles and vector addition.

Without this, mechanics becomes a fog.

Calculus

A-level Physics specifications do not always require students to do large amounts of formal calculus in the exam, but the ideas behind calculus are everywhere.

Velocity is the rate of change of displacement.

Acceleration is the rate of change of velocity.

Work done can be found from the area under a force-extension graph.

Induced emf depends on the rate of change of magnetic flux linkage.

Simple harmonic motion is deeply connected to changing displacement, velocity and acceleration.

A student does not need to become a university mathematician, but they do need to be comfortable with the idea that Physics is often about how one quantity changes with another.

Exponentials and Logarithms

Radioactive decay, capacitor discharge and some thermal processes involve exponential change.

This is a major step up from simple proportional relationships.

Students need to understand that some things do not decrease by the same amount each second. They decrease by the same fraction each second.

That is a subtle but vital idea.

Without logarithms and exponentials, these topics can become a set of memorised tricks rather than meaningful Physics.


Practical Examples from Teaching

The problem shows up most clearly in practical work.

Take a simple experiment: measuring acceleration using a trolley and a ramp.

At first, the student may think the experiment is about releasing a trolley and recording a time.

But the Physics comes from the analysis.

They must calculate velocity, plot graphs, understand uncertainty, possibly use the gradient and compare the result with a theoretical prediction.

Or take a waves experiment.

Students may observe standing waves on a string. They can see the nodes and antinodes. That is visually impressive. But the understanding comes when they connect frequency, wavelength and wave speed:

V=fλ

Then they must measure carefully, plot data and explain the relationship.

Or take electricity.

A student may build a circuit and measure current and voltage. But then they need to understand why the gradient of a voltage-current graph gives resistance. They need to know whether the component is ohmic. They need to interpret a curve for a filament lamp or diode.

The practical work is not separate from the Maths.

The Maths is what turns the practical into evidence.


Why Further Maths Can Be So Helpful

I would normally recommend that a student taking A-level Physics should take A-level Maths.

For many students, especially those considering Physics, Engineering, Mathematics, Computer Science or highly quantitative university courses, I would also strongly consider Further Maths.

Further Maths is not essential for every Physics student, but it can be a powerful advantage.

It develops:

  • deeper algebraic fluency
  • stronger problem-solving habits
  • more confidence with complex expressions
  • mechanics beyond the standard Maths course
  • mathematical resilience

The biggest benefit may not be any one topic. It is the confidence that comes from seeing Maths as a tool rather than a threat.

A student taking Physics, Maths and Further Maths is usually better prepared for the mathematical style of university science and engineering. They are also more likely to cope when a Physics problem does not look exactly like the one in the textbook.

That is important because real Physics is not about recognising a memorised question.

It is about modelling a new situation.


But What If a Student Has Already Chosen Physics Without Maths?

This is where the teaching has to become very targeted.

There is no point simply telling the student that they made the wrong choice. That may be true in terms of subject planning, but it does not help them now.

The job is to build the missing mathematical tools as quickly and carefully as possible.

I would usually begin with a diagnostic check:

  • Can they rearrange equations?
  • Can they use standard form?
  • Can they calculate gradients?
  • Can they interpret units?
  • Can they use trigonometry?
  • Can they handle proportionality?
  • Can they draw and use free-body diagrams?
  • Can they explain what an equation means physically?

Then I would teach the Maths in context.

Not abstractly.

Not as a separate course.

But through the Physics.

For example:

  • Teach trigonometry through resolving forces on a slope.
  • Teach gradients through Ohm’s law and resistance.
  • Teach exponentials through capacitor discharge.
  • Teach standard form through electrons and photons.
  • Teach algebra through SUVAT equations.
  • Teach uncertainty through real measurements in the laboratory.

This approach helps because the student sees immediately why the Maths matters.

They are not learning Maths because a teacher says it is good for them.

They are learning it because it unlocks the Physics problem in front of them.


The Advice I Would Give to Year 11 Students

If a Year 11 student is choosing A-levels and wants to study Physics, my advice would be simple:

Do not choose Physics unless you are also seriously considering Maths.

If you enjoy Physics but dislike Maths, you need to think very carefully. You may enjoy the stories of Physics, the demonstrations, the space documentaries, the engineering, the explosions and the experiments — but A-level Physics is assessed through mathematical thinking.

That does not mean you have to be perfect at Maths.

It does mean you have to be willing to work at it.

If you are aiming for Engineering, Physics, Astrophysics, Mathematics, Computer Science or many technical degrees, then Physics and Maths together are usually the sensible route. Further Maths may also be a very strong choice, particularly for competitive university courses.

If you are not taking Maths, ask very serious questions before choosing Physics.

Not because Physics is impossible without Maths.

But because it is much harder than many students expect.


Schools Need to Be Honest About the Combination

I understand why schools want to keep options open for students. I understand that timetables are difficult. I understand that some students want Physics but cannot or do not want to take Maths.

But we should be honest with them.

A-level Physics without A-level Maths is possible for some students, but it is risky. It creates an additional burden. It means the Physics teacher may have to teach missing Maths alongside the Physics content. It means the student may be constantly patching gaps while also trying to learn demanding new ideas.

That is not ideal.

We should not pretend that a support qualification is the same as studying A-level Maths. It may help, but it does not replace the mathematical depth that Physics needs.

Students deserve clear advice before they make their choices.


Physics Is Beautiful Because It Is Mathematical

The irony is that Maths is not the boring part of Physics.

It is often the beautiful part.

Maths allows us to predict the motion of planets, calculate the energy of photons, design bridges, understand electric circuits, analyse sound waves, model climate, build medical scanners, launch satellites and explain why a boat turns when forces act through the rudder and hull.

Without Maths, Physics becomes a collection of interesting stories.

With Maths, Physics becomes a way of seeing the world.

That is why I encourage Physics students to embrace Maths, not fear it.

Not because they need to become mathematicians.

But because Maths gives Physics its power.


Conclusion: Choose the Tools That Match the Subject

A student choosing A-level Physics needs to understand what they are really choosing.

They are choosing a subject that asks them to think, model, calculate, interpret, analyse and explain. They are choosing a subject where equations are not decorations on a formula sheet. They are the structure underneath the ideas.

For that reason, I would normally recommend that students taking A-level Physics should also take A-level Maths.

For many, Further Maths is even better.

Core Maths may help some students, and it is certainly better than no mathematical support at all, but it should not be mistaken for a full substitute.

Physics is one of the most rewarding subjects a student can study. It explains the universe from the smallest particles to the largest galaxies. It explains electricity, motion, waves, forces, energy, matter, radiation and fields.

But to understand it properly, students need the right tools.

And the most important tool in the Physics toolbox is Maths.

16 June 2026

The Physics Students Never Get to See

 


The Physics Students Never Get to See

Have Students Really Studied Physics?

A student can complete GCSE Physics, go on to A-Level Physics, work hard, pass exams, learn equations, draw graphs, complete required practicals and still only have seen a thin slice of what Physics really is.

That is not a criticism of the exam system. A course has to have boundaries. There must be a syllabus, a specification, assessment objectives, required practicals and a manageable number of topics. Without that structure, no teacher could prepare students properly and no student could revise sensibly.

But there is a danger.

Students can come away thinking that Physics is only the physics they have been examined on.

They may believe Physics is mainly:

  • forces on blocks,

  • current through resistors,

  • moments around pivots,

  • radioactive decay equations,

  • lenses and ray diagrams,

  • waves on a string,

  • and perhaps a little particle physics at A-Level.

All of those are important. They are the foundations. But they are not the whole building.

The real world is full of Physics that many students barely touch. In some cases, they do not meet it at all. They know how to rearrange an equation, but they may not know how a loudspeaker works. They can calculate acceleration, but they may not understand why an aeroplane wing stalls. They may know about energy transfer, but not how a heat pump extracts heat from cold air. They may know pressure equals force divided by area, but have never explored the beautiful engineering of an Archimedes screw.

That is a shame, because these missing areas are often the parts of Physics that make students stop and say:

“Oh — that is what Physics is for.”


The Exam Course Is a Map, Not the Whole Country

A Physics specification is like a map used for a journey. It shows the essential roads. It helps you get from GCSE to A-Level, and from A-Level to university or employment.

But no map shows every footpath, garden, workshop, river bend or hidden valley.

GCSE and A-Level Physics give students a toolkit. They learn about:

  • energy,

  • forces,

  • waves,

  • electricity,

  • magnetism,

  • matter,

  • radiation,

  • fields,

  • particles,

  • measurements,

  • uncertainty,

  • practical skills.

That toolkit matters enormously. Without it, students cannot go much further.

However, Physics is much wider than the toolkit. It is also the science of musical instruments, bridges, aircraft, boats, mobile phones, medical scanners, weather systems, cameras, turbines, pumps, microphones, loudspeakers, lasers, engines, sensors, robotics and the structure of the universe.

A student may leave school knowing Newton’s laws but not really knowing why their bicycle remains stable.

They may know the wave equation but not why a trumpet sounds different from a flute.

They may know about transformers but not why the charger on their laptop gets warm.

They may know about pressure in liquids but not how a screw can lift water uphill.

That gap between examination Physics and living Physics is where curiosity should be encouraged.


Sound: The Physics Many Students Hear but Do Not Study Properly

Sound is one of the best examples of hidden Physics.

Students hear sound every day. They speak, listen, play music, use headphones, watch videos, hear echoes, notice noisy rooms, and complain when the microphone on a video sounds dreadful.

Yet many students study sound only briefly.

They may learn that sound is a longitudinal wave. They may know it needs a medium. They may remember that the human ear detects vibrations. They may learn that frequency affects pitch and amplitude affects loudness.

But there is so much more.

What Students Often Miss About Sound

Sound can open the door to:

  • resonance,

  • harmonics,

  • standing waves,

  • acoustic interference,

  • beats,

  • echoes,

  • reverberation,

  • sound insulation,

  • ultrasound,

  • microphone design,

  • loudspeaker design,

  • decibels,

  • Fourier analysis,

  • noise cancellation,

  • room acoustics,

  • musical instrument physics.

A stretched string, a tuning fork, a loudspeaker, a microphone and a phone app can become a complete laboratory.

Why does a guitar string produce a different sound when shortened by pressing it against a fret?

Why does a violin sound different from a flute when they play the same note?

Why does a room with hard walls sound echoey?

Why does a cheap microphone make a voice sound thin?

Why does putting a hand over a loudspeaker change the sound?

Why does a bottle produce a note when you blow across the top?

These are not trivial questions. They are real Physics questions.

In my own teaching, I find that sound is a wonderful topic because it is visible, audible and measurable. Students can see the waveform on a screen, hear the note with their ears and connect both to frequency, amplitude and wavelength. A microphone and loudspeaker are not just pieces of equipment; they are examples of energy transfer, electromagnetism, mechanics and wave theory all working together.

A loudspeaker is not “just a speaker”. It is a coil, magnet, diaphragm, alternating current, force, vibration, pressure wave and energy conversion device.

That one object contains half a Physics course.


The Archimedes Screw: Ancient Machine, Beautiful Physics

Another example is the Archimedes screw.

Many students have never studied it. Some may have seen one at a water park, drainage system, museum, sewage works, irrigation channel or environmental project, but they may not have thought about the Physics.

At first glance, it looks simple: a screw turns and water moves upwards.

But why?

The Archimedes screw is a wonderful example of applied Physics because it brings together:

  • rotational motion,

  • torque,

  • work done,

  • gravitational potential energy,

  • pressure,

  • friction,

  • efficiency,

  • flow rate,

  • mechanical advantage,

  • energy losses,

  • engineering design.

It is also a perfect example of how Physics does not have to be modern to be clever. Ancient engineering can be just as interesting as modern electronics.

A student could investigate:

  • how the angle of the screw affects flow rate,

  • how rotation speed changes the volume of water lifted,

  • how much power is required,

  • where energy is lost,

  • how the pitch of the screw changes performance,

  • why some designs are more efficient than others,

  • how the same idea can be used in reverse as a turbine.

Suddenly, a simple water-lifting device becomes a full project in mechanics, energy and fluids.

This is the sort of Physics that helps students understand the real world. It also helps them realise that engineering is not separate from Physics. Engineering is Physics with consequences.


Fluid Dynamics: The Physics of Things That Flow

Fluid dynamics is another huge area that often receives only a brief mention at school.

Students may learn about pressure in liquids and gases. They may learn density and upthrust. They may meet drag force. But they rarely get very far into the Physics of flow.

Yet flow is everywhere.

It is in:

  • rivers,

  • blood vessels,

  • air around a wing,

  • water around a boat hull,

  • smoke rising from a candle,

  • ventilation systems,

  • weather,

  • turbines,

  • pumps,

  • propellers,

  • sails,

  • drains,

  • engines,

  • and even the movement of cream stirred into coffee.

For a student who sails, flies drones, cycles, swims or watches Formula 1, fluid dynamics is everywhere.

Why does a sail produce a force?

Why does a boat slow down when the hull shape is poor?

Why does turbulence waste energy?

Why does a cyclist crouch down to reduce drag?

Why does water sometimes flow smoothly and sometimes become chaotic?

Why does a wing stall?

These are difficult questions, but students do not need university-level mathematics to begin exploring them. They can use smoke, water channels, food colouring, fans, paper wings, model boats and slow-motion video.

Once students begin to see flow, they realise that Physics is not only about neat diagrams. It is also about messy, swirling, beautiful reality.


The Physics of Heat Pumps, Fridges and Real Energy Systems

Students study energy. They learn about conservation of energy, efficiency, power and wasted energy.

But many leave school without really understanding heat pumps, fridges or air conditioning systems.

That is a missed opportunity.

A heat pump is a brilliant teaching object because it challenges everyday assumptions. Students often think heat only moves from hot to cold. Then they meet a machine that appears to take heat from cold outside air and move it into a warm house.

That sounds impossible until you study the Physics.

A heat pump involves:

  • evaporation,

  • condensation,

  • compression,

  • expansion,

  • pressure changes,

  • temperature changes,

  • latent heat,

  • work done by a compressor,

  • energy transfer from a colder region to a warmer region.

This is not abstract Physics. It is the Physics of how homes are heated, how food is kept cold and how modern society uses energy.

When students understand heat pumps, they also understand why insulation matters, why efficiency can be greater than a simple electric heater, and why energy policy is not just politics — it is Physics.


Materials: Why Things Bend, Break and Wear Out

At GCSE and A-Level, students may meet Hooke’s law, stress, strain and the Young modulus. These are valuable ideas.

But real materials are far more complicated.

Why does metal fatigue?

Why does wood split along the grain?

Why does fibreglass behave differently from aluminium?

Why does a boat deck lose varnish?

Why does plastic become brittle in sunlight?

Why does a phone screen crack from a tiny impact?

Why does a bridge need expansion joints?

This is the Physics of materials, and it is enormously important.

In my own workshop and boat projects, materials Physics appears constantly. Sanding, varnishing, repairing, drilling, bonding, 3D printing and reinforcing are not just practical jobs. They involve adhesion, surface preparation, elasticity, thermal expansion, moisture, fracture, stress concentration and chemical change.

Students often enjoy this kind of Physics because it feels useful. It explains why things fail and how we can make them last longer.

That is an excellent lesson, especially in a world where repair and sustainability matter more than ever.


Sensors, Instruments and Measurement: The Hidden Physics of Modern Life

Students often use sensors in experiments without studying the Physics of the sensors themselves.

A light gate gives a time. A data logger produces a graph. A microphone displays a waveform. A Geiger counter clicks. A temperature probe gives a reading.

But how?

The Physics of measurement is one of the most important hidden areas of the subject.

Students could explore:

  • how a thermistor changes resistance,

  • how a microphone converts sound into voltage,

  • how a photodiode responds to light,

  • how a Hall probe detects magnetic fields,

  • how a strain gauge measures force,

  • how a Geiger-Müller tube detects ionising radiation,

  • how uncertainty enters every measurement,

  • how calibration changes raw data into useful data.

This matters because modern Physics is not just about ideas. It is about measurement.

If students do not understand instruments, they can become button-pressers. They collect numbers without understanding how those numbers were produced.

A good Physics education should help students ask, “How does this instrument know?”

That question leads to better science.


The Physics of Devices Students Use Every Day

One of the best ways to widen Physics is to take everyday objects seriously.

A phone is not just a phone. It is:

  • semiconductor Physics,

  • optics,

  • radio waves,

  • antennas,

  • batteries,

  • sensors,

  • accelerometers,

  • microphones,

  • loudspeakers,

  • touchscreens,

  • signal processing,

  • heat transfer,

  • data storage.

A camera is not just a camera. It is:

  • lenses,

  • aperture,

  • diffraction,

  • sensor technology,

  • exposure,

  • colour filters,

  • noise,

  • stabilisation,

  • polarisation,

  • dynamic range.

A washing machine is not just a domestic appliance. It is:

  • circular motion,

  • motors,

  • water pressure,

  • resonance,

  • vibration damping,

  • heating,

  • control systems,

  • sensors,

  • energy transfer.

A bicycle is not just transport. It is:

  • torque,

  • gearing,

  • friction,

  • rolling resistance,

  • gyroscopic effects,

  • balance,

  • braking,

  • aerodynamics.

Students often think Physics lives in textbooks. It does not. It lives in the things on their desk, in their pocket, in the kitchen, in the garage, in the garden, on the river and above their heads.


Why These Missing Experiments Matter

It is easy to say, “There is no time. We have exams to prepare for.”

That is true.

But it is also true that students learn better when they understand why the subject matters.

A short demonstration outside the specification can sometimes make the specification easier to learn.

A student who has explored microphones understands waves more deeply.

A student who has built a simple pump understands pressure and energy better.

A student who has investigated a loudspeaker understands electromagnetism in a more memorable way.

A student who has looked at flow around a sail sees forces as real, not just arrows on a diagram.

A student who has used a sensor and questioned how it works becomes a better experimental scientist.

The aim is not to replace exam preparation. The aim is to enrich it.


Practical Extension Experiments Worth Doing

Here are some examples of experiments and demonstrations that can bring missing Physics into the classroom or tuition laboratory.

1. Loudspeaker and Microphone Investigation

Connect a signal generator to a loudspeaker and use a microphone to display the waveform.

Students can investigate:

  • frequency,

  • amplitude,

  • resonance,

  • waveform shape,

  • loudness,

  • distance from source,

  • interference between two speakers.

This links waves, electricity, magnetism and energy transfer.

2. Bottle Organ or Tube Resonance

Use bottles with different water levels or tubes of different lengths.

Students can investigate:

  • pitch,

  • air column length,

  • standing waves,

  • resonance,

  • harmonics.

This is simple, cheap and memorable.

3. Archimedes Screw Model

Use a model screw or 3D-printed version to lift water.

Students can investigate:

  • angle,

  • rotation speed,

  • flow rate,

  • efficiency,

  • work done,

  • power input.

This is ideal for connecting Physics with engineering.

4. Flow Visualisation

Use water, dye, smoke or a fan to show flow patterns.

Students can investigate:

  • laminar flow,

  • turbulent flow,

  • drag,

  • streamlining,

  • vortex formation.

This makes invisible forces visible.

5. Heat Pump or Fridge Demonstration

Use safe temperature measurements around a fridge, freezer or demonstration heat pump.

Students can investigate:

  • temperature changes,

  • energy transfer,

  • work done,

  • thermal efficiency,

  • heat movement from cold to warm.

This links directly to real energy questions.

6. Sensor Investigation

Compare a traditional measuring method with an electronic sensor.

Students can investigate:

  • calibration,

  • resolution,

  • response time,

  • uncertainty,

  • noise,

  • data logging.

This helps students become more critical experimental scientists.

7. Materials Failure Investigation

Test different materials under bending, stretching or repeated loading.

Students can investigate:

  • elastic behaviour,

  • plastic deformation,

  • fatigue,

  • fracture,

  • surface damage,

  • repair methods.

This connects Physics with engineering, sustainability and design.


The Personal Value of Wider Physics

One of the reasons I enjoy teaching Physics is that it never stays inside the textbook.

In a laboratory, a classroom, a workshop, a studio or a boat park, Physics keeps appearing.

It appears when a microphone picks up sound during a video lesson.

It appears when a camera lens focuses light.

It appears when a 3D printer makes a bracket that has to be strong enough for real use.

It appears when a boat moves through water.

It appears when varnish fails, when a battery charges, when a loudspeaker vibrates, when a sensor collects data, when a heat pump warms a house, and when a student suddenly sees the connection between an equation and the world.

That is the moment teaching becomes exciting.

The exam specification gives students the framework. Wider Physics gives them the wonder.


Conclusion: Physics Is Bigger Than the Exam

GCSE and A-Level Physics are valuable. They give students essential foundations. They teach important concepts, mathematical skills and practical methods.

But they are not the whole of Physics.

There are huge areas that many students never properly meet: acoustics, fluid dynamics, engineering machines, materials science, sensors, control systems, heat pumps, aerodynamics, device physics and the Physics of everyday technology.

Students should know this.

They should not finish a course believing that Physics is only what appears on an exam paper. They should understand that the exam is the beginning, not the boundary.

A good Physics education prepares students to pass exams.

A great Physics education makes them look at a loudspeaker, a river, a bicycle, a pump, a camera, a boat or a musical instrument and ask:

“How does that work?”

That question is where real Physics begins.

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.

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