05 April 2026

Core vs Peripheral Workers – The Secret Behind Flexible Businesses


Core vs Peripheral Workers – The Secret Behind Flexible Businesses

In Business Studies, one topic that often appears in exams is labour flexibility—and at the heart of this is the idea of core and peripheral workers.

At first glance, it sounds simple. But in reality, it explains how many modern businesses actually survive.

The Core Workforce – The Backbone of the Business

Core workers are the people a business cannot easily replace.

These employees:

  • Have specialist skills or experience
  • Are usually on permanent, full-time contracts
  • Often understand the business in depth
  • May be involved in decision-making or training others

Because they are so valuable, businesses invest in them.

A key idea: core workers are often multi-skilled

Why?

Because flexibility isn’t just about hiring and firing—it’s about being able to adapt quickly. A multi-skilled employee can:

  • Cover absences
  • Switch roles when demand changes
  • Improve overall efficiency

Think of them as the engine of the business.


The Peripheral Workforce – Flexibility in Action

Peripheral workers are very different.

These employees:

  • Are easier to replace
  • Work on temporary, part-time, or zero-hours contracts
  • Are brought in only when needed

This gives firms the ability to:

  • Cope with seasonal demand
  • Reduce labour costs
  • Avoid paying staff when there is no work

Real-World Examples

Some businesses simply couldn’t function without a peripheral workforce:

  • Seaside hotels → Busy in summer, quiet in winter
  • Strawberry farms → Huge demand during harvest season
  • Retail at Christmas → Temporary surge in customers

In these cases, hiring a full-time workforce year-round would be financially unsustainable.


The Balance – Why Businesses Use Both

A successful flexible firm combines:

  • Core workers → stability, skill, long-term knowledge
  • Peripheral workers → flexibility, cost control

Too many core workers → expensive and inflexible
Too many peripheral workers → lack of skill and consistency

The key is getting the balance right


Exam Tip

When answering questions on this topic:

  • Always define both groups clearly
  • Use real-world examples
  • Explain why flexibility matters
  • Link to costs, efficiency, and competitiveness

Final Thought

Flexible firms don’t just cut costs—they adapt to survive.

Understanding core and peripheral workers helps explain everything from:

  • Seasonal businesses
  • Gig economy jobs
  • Modern employment trends

And yes… next time you visit a seaside hotel, you’ll know exactly how it’s staffed!

04 April 2026

From Moon Landings to Modern Machines: How Computers Have Transformed

 

From Moon Landings to Modern Machines: How Computers Have Transformed

Then: The Computers That Took Us to the Moon

When Apollo 11 Moon Landing took humans to the Moon in 1969, the computers involved were astonishing… for their time.

But by today’s standards? Almost unbelievable.

  • The Apollo Guidance Computer (AGC) had just 64 KB of memory
  • It ran at about 0.043 MHz
  • Programs were literally woven into rope memory by hand
  • No screens as we know them — just simple numeric displays

Yet, this tiny computer:

  • Controlled navigation
  • Managed landing calculations
  • Helped Neil Armstrong land safely on the Moon

All with less computing power than a modern calculator.


Now: The Power in Your Pocket

Fast forward to today, and the change is staggering.

A typical smartphone now has:

  • Millions of times more processing power
  • Gigabytes of RAM (not kilobytes!)
  • High-resolution graphics, AI processing, and constant internet access

Even everyday devices can:

  • Run complex simulations
  • Stream live video globally
  • Use AI to recognise speech, faces, and patterns

What once filled a room now fits in your pocket — and does far more.


What Actually Changed?

It’s not just speed — it’s everything:

1. Miniaturisation
From room-sized machines to microscopic transistors on chips.

2. Storage Revolution
From woven memory → magnetic disks → solid-state drives → cloud storage.

3. User Interfaces
From switches and code → graphical interfaces → touchscreens → voice control.

4. Connectivity
Apollo computers were isolated. Today, everything is connected via the internet.


The Big Question for Students 

If we could land on the Moon with such limited technology…

What could you achieve today with vastly more powerful tools?

Modern students have access to:

  • Simulation software
  • Coding platforms
  • AI assistants
  • Global collaboration

The challenge is no longer access to technology — it’s how effectively you use i

03 April 2026

Why Do Students Find Titration Questions So Difficult?

 

Why Do Students Find Titration Questions So Difficult?

Titration questions appear year after year in GCSE and A-Level Chemistry papers. And yet… they remain one of the most commonly misunderstood topics.

After 40 years of teaching, I can confidently say this:
It’s not that titrations are difficult — it’s that they combine too many skills at once.

Let’s break down why students struggle — and more importantly, how to fix it.


1. Too Many Steps in One Question

A typical titration question isn’t just one task. It might involve:

  • Writing a balanced equation
  • Converting units (cm³ → dm³)
  • Using concentration formulas
  • Applying mole ratios
  • Calculating an unknown concentration

Miss one step… and the whole answer can unravel.

 Students often know each step individually — but struggle to link them together.


2. Weak Understanding of Moles

At its heart, titration is all about moles.

If a student isn’t confident with:

  • n=c×Vn = c \times V
  • Rearranging equations
  • Stoichiometric ratios

…then titration becomes guesswork.

Many students try to memorise “methods” instead of understanding why they are doing each step.


3. Units, Units, Units…

This is a classic mistake:

  • Volume given in cm³
  • Formula requires dm³

Forgetting to divide by 1000 leads to answers that are wildly wrong.

It’s not chemistry that’s catching students out here — it’s attention to detail.


4. Misunderstanding the End Point

In the lab:

  • You’re looking for a colour change

In the exam:

  • You’re working with precise numerical data

Students often don’t connect the practical with the calculation.

They don’t always realise that the end point = exact reacting amounts.


5. Poor Experimental Awareness

Even calculation questions assume you understand the method:

  • Why do we use a burette?
  • Why rinse with the solution?
  • Why repeat to get concordant results?

Without this understanding, questions feel abstract and harder to interpret.


6. Exam Technique (The Real Issue!)

Many students:

  • Rush
  • Skip steps
  • Don’t show working

And titration questions are method-mark heavy — meaning you can pick up marks even if the final answer is wrong.

The best students aren’t always the smartest — they’re the most systematic.


How to Master Titration Questions

Here’s what I tell my students:

1. Learn the structure (not just the method):

  • Volume → Moles → Ratio → Answer

2. Always write the equation first

3. Convert units immediately

4. Show every step clearly

5. Practise — a lot
One titration question a day = massive improvement


Final Thought

Titration questions aren’t designed to trick you.
They’re designed to test whether you can:
✔ Think logically
✔ Apply multiple skills
✔ Work methodically

Master those — and titration becomes one of the easiest marks on the paper.

02 April 2026

“Radioactivity in Everyday Life – It’s Closer Than You Think”

 


“Radioactivity in Everyday Life – It’s Closer Than You Think”

“It’s invisible, silent, and you certainly can’t smell it… but radioactivity is all around us.”

This week in the lab has been a particularly enjoyable one, running radioactivity sessions with students. Not because we were handling dangerous sources — quite the opposite — but because we were exploring just how ordinary radioactivity can be.

Out came the Radiacode app and handheld detector, and instead of sealed lab sources, we investigated items you could (in theory) buy or already have at home.

What did we test?

  • A thorium-enriched welding rod
  • Small uranium-glazed pottery shards (from an old cup)
  • Vintage watch hands painted with radium
  • A standard household smoke alarm

Each one tells a story.

The welding rod gives off a steady, measurable count. The uranium glaze — once popular for its bright colour — quietly ticks away. And those old watch hands? A reminder of a time before we fully understood the risks.

Then comes the surprise…

The Smoke Alarm

Yes — it contains a radioactive source (americium).

But when measured?

The count is barely above background.

Why? Because the source is properly shielded and safely contained. It’s a brilliant real-world example of how radioactive materials can be used safely in everyday devices.

Why this approach works

I deliberately avoid using “dangerous” lab sources where possible.

Instead, I focus on:

  • Real-world objects
  • Safe exposure levels
  • Understanding rather than fear

Students quickly realise:
Radioactivity isn’t just something in nuclear power stations
It’s part of the world around us

And crucially:
Risk depends on exposure and shielding, not just the presence of a radioactive material

The takeaway

By the end of the session, students aren’t just measuring counts — they’re thinking like physicists:

  • What type of radiation is this?
  • How is it being shielded?
  • Should we be concerned?

And perhaps most importantly…

Not everything radioactive is dangerous — but everything should be respected.

01 April 2026

Maths Easter – Exam Practice Time

 


Maths Easter – Exam Practice Time

Easter is here… and for Maths students, that means one thing: The Syllabus has been completed - you should have learnt everything.

Practice. Practice. Practice.

It’s not about reading notes.
It’s not about watching endless videos.
It’s about doing questions — lots of them.

The students who get the top grades are not always the “naturally clever” ones. They are the ones who have seen every type of question before.


The Simple Plan That Works

Do one paper a day
Mark it properly (be honest!)
Fix your mistakes immediately

If you have access to an AI, get it to create a similar question to the one you just failed.  After you have worked out what to do, try this new question. You should now be able to do it.


Repeat the weak topics the next day

It sounds simple — because it is.

But most students don’t do it consistently.


Why This Works

Maths exams are predictable.

There are only so many ways exam boards can ask:

  • Algebra
  • Trigonometry
  • Calculus
  • Graphs
  • Problem solving

The more papers you do, the more you start to think:

“Ah… I’ve seen this before.”

That’s when confidence builds — and marks follow.


Common Mistakes to Avoid

❌ Doing a paper… and never marking it
❌ Ignoring topics you find difficult
❌ Rushing through without exam timing
❌ Not learning from errors

Every mistake is actually a free lesson — if you take the time to understand it.


A Better Approach

  • Keep a mistake notebook
  • Write down:
    • What you got wrong
    • Why you got it wrong
    • The correct method

Review it every few days — this is where real progress happens.


Final Thought

You don’t improve in Maths by watching.
You improve by doing.

So this Easter:

👉 One paper a day
👉 Learn from every mistake
👉 Build confidence question by question

By the time exams arrive… you’ll be ready.

31 March 2026

Radioactivity – You Can’t See It… But It’s There

 


Radioactivity – You Can’t See It… But It’s There

You can’t see it.
You can’t hear it.
You certainly can’t smell it.

And yet… it’s all around us.

That’s the fascinating—and slightly unsettling—nature of radioactivity.

In the lab, we bring the invisible to life using a cloud chamber. Suddenly, what was hidden becomes visible: tiny streaks and trails zipping through the air. These are particles emitted from radioactive materials—real evidence that something is happening at an atomic level.

One of the most striking demonstrations involves a thorium welding rod. Often used in TIG welding, it looks completely ordinary. But place it in a cloud chamber, and it becomes a source of constant activity—alpha particles leaving thick, short tracks like miniature contrails.


Everyday Objects… With a Twist

What makes radioactivity truly engaging for students is this: it’s not just found in nuclear reactors or science labs.

It’s in everyday objects.

  • Bananas – naturally radioactive due to potassium-40
  • Old watch faces – once painted with radium for glow-in-the-dark visibility
  • Vintage teacups or glassware – sometimes coated with uranium-based glazes

Using a radiation detector (Geiger counter), these items suddenly become far more interesting. The clicking sound brings the invisible into the audible world—each click a tiny event at the atomic scale.


Why This Matters for Students

At GCSE and A-Level, radioactivity can feel abstract—just another topic to memorise:

  • Alpha, beta, gamma
  • Half-life equations
  • Decay chains

But when students see the tracks in a cloud chamber or hear the clicks from a detector, something changes.

It becomes real.

They begin to understand that:

  • Atoms are not static—they can change and decay
  • Radiation is a natural part of our environment
  • “Dangerous” doesn’t always mean obvious

A Subtle but Powerful Lesson

Perhaps the biggest takeaway isn’t just physics—it’s awareness.

Some things that look completely harmless can have hidden properties. That doesn’t mean we should be afraid—but we should understand them.

Because science isn’t just about what we can see…

…it’s about discovering what we can’t.

30 March 2026

A-Level Biology: How to Get the Highest Marks (Easter Strategy)

 


A-Level Biology: How to Get the Highest Marks (Easter Strategy)

Biology feels like a memory subject… but the truth is:

Top students don’t just know biology — they know how to answer biology questions.


1. Learn the Mark Scheme Language (This is EVERYTHING)

Examiners are not impressed by “good understanding” — they reward specific phrases.

Example:

  • ❌ “Oxygen is needed for respiration”
  • ✅ “Oxygen acts as the final electron acceptor in oxidative phosphorylation”

What to do:

  • Go through past paper mark schemes
  • Build a “phrase bank” for each topic
  • Memorise exact wording

2. Active Recall > Passive Reading

Reading notes is one of the least effective revision methods.

Do this instead:

  • Blurting (write everything you know from memory)
  • Flashcards (Leitner system works brilliantly)
  • Teach someone else (or even your dog!)

If you can’t recall it → you don’t know it.


3. Master Practical Questions (Easy Marks!)

Students often lose marks on required practicals — and these are predictable.

Focus on:

  • Variables (independent, dependent, control)
  • Graph skills
  • Evaluating experiments (limitations + improvements)

Learn standard phrases like:

  • “Repeat measurements to increase reliability”
  • “Use a colorimeter to reduce subjective error”

4. Do LOTS of Past Papers (But Properly)

Not just doing them — learning from them.

The winning method:

  1. Attempt question
  2. Mark it strictly
  3. Rewrite answer using mark scheme
  4. Add to your notes

Aim for:

  • 2–3 papers per week over Easter

5. Understand the “Big Ideas”

Top students link topics together.

Examples:

  • Structure → function (proteins, membranes, lungs)
  • Energy transfer (photosynthesis ↔ respiration)
  • Control systems (nervous vs hormonal)

 Ask yourself:
“Why does this matter?”
“Where else does this idea appear?”


6. Perfect Long Answer Questions (8–10 markers)

This is where grades are made.

Use a structure (PEEL works well):

  • Point
  • Explain
  • Example
  • Link back

Examiner wants:

  • Logical order
  • Correct terminology
  • No waffle

Tip:
Write like a scientist, not a storyteller.


7. Timing & Exam Technique

Many students run out of time or rush.

Practice:

  • 1 mark ≈ 1 minute
  • Don’t over-write 2-mark questions
  • Always attempt everything

8. Common Mistakes to Avoid

  • Vague answers (“it helps”, “it affects” ❌)
  • Missing key terms
  • Not reading the question properly
  • Ignoring command words (e.g. describe vs explain)

9. Easter Revision Plan (Simple but Effective)

Daily Structure:

  • 1 topic review (active recall)
  • 1 set of exam questions
  • 1 practical focus
  • 20 mins flashcards

Weekly:

  • 2–3 full papers
  • Review weak areas

 Final Thought

Biology isn’t about being “clever” — it’s about being precise.

The students who get A/A*:

  • Use the right words
  • Answer the exact question
  • Practise relentlessly

Core vs Peripheral Workers – The Secret Behind Flexible Businesses

Core vs Peripheral Workers – The Secret Behind Flexible Businesses In Business Studies, one topic that often appears in exams is labour flex...