10 April 2026

Chemistry Calculations – Easy… Until Rates Appear!

 


Chemistry Calculations – Easy… Until Rates Appear!

“It Was All Going So Well… Then They Asked for the Rate”

Chemistry calculations are, for the most part, quite friendly.

Moles?
No problem.
Concentration?
Straightforward.
Titrations?
A bit fiddly, but manageable with practice.

Then… along comes rates of reaction.

And suddenly everything feels like it’s been turned upside down.


What Changes When Rates Appear?

Up until now, most calculations are nice and structured:

  • You’re given values
  • You follow a formula
  • You get an answer

But rates questions introduce something new:

Time

And time complicates everything.

Now you’re not just working out how much
you’re working out how fast it’s happening.


The Real Problem: Graphs

This is where most students come unstuck.

You’re given a graph and asked:

  • What is the rate at the start?
  • What is the rate at 20 seconds?
  • How does the rate change over time?

And the dreaded instruction appears:

“Draw a tangent…”

At this point, confidence often disappears.


Why Students Struggle

It’s not actually the chemistry — it’s the maths skills inside the chemistry.

Students need to:

  • Understand gradients (slopes)
  • Draw a tangent accurately
  • Calculate rise/run
  • Interpret changing curves

In other words…

It quietly becomes a maths question disguised as chemistry


What Is Rate (Really)?

At its simplest:

Rate = amount ÷ time

But in chemistry, we refine that idea:

  • Rate changes during a reaction
  • It’s fastest at the start
  • It slows as reactants are used up

So instead of a simple calculation, we often need:

Rate at a specific moment
(which is where the tangent comes in)


Practical Work Helps (A Lot!)

This is one topic where doing the experiment makes everything clearer.

For example:

  • Measuring gas produced using a gas syringe
  • Timing how long a reaction takes to cloud
  • Watching how quickly bubbles form

Suddenly the graph isn’t abstract anymore — it’s real data you’ve collected.


Exam Tip (Gold Dust)

When you see a rates question:

  1. Read the graph carefully
  2. If asked for rate at a point → draw a tangent
  3. Make your triangle big (for accuracy)
  4. Calculate gradient clearly
  5. Include units (students forget this!)

Final Thought

Chemistry calculations don’t suddenly become hard…

They just quietly turn into maths when you’re not looking.

Master the graph skills, and suddenly:

Rates become one of the easiest topics on the paper.

09 April 2026

The PASCO Smart Cart – More Than Just a Toy on Wheels

 


The PASCO Smart Cart – More Than Just a Toy on Wheels

When most students first see the PASCO Smart Cart, they assume it’s just another trolley to push along a track.

“Oh… we’re doing motion again.”

But this little cart is far more than that.

It’s not just about rolling from A to B — it’s a fully equipped mobile physics laboratory.


Not Just Motion… Proper Physics

Yes, it does motion brilliantly:

  • Velocity
  • Acceleration
  • Graphs in real time

But here’s where it gets interesting…

Students don’t just see motion — they measure it properly, with instant feedback.

No more:

“Sir… I think that line is straight?”

Now we know.


Forces – Newton Comes Alive

Attach a force sensor and suddenly:

  • F=maF = ma isn’t just a formula
  • It’s a graph students create themselves

Pull the cart… and watch:

  • Force change
  • Acceleration respond
  • Graphs update instantly

That “aha” moment?
That’s where learning happens.


Simple Harmonic Motion (Without the Headache)

Hook it to a spring and suddenly SHM becomes:

  • Visual
  • Measurable
  • Understandable

Students can see:

  • Displacement
  • Velocity
  • Acceleration

All at once.

Even better… they can see the phase differences.

(Which normally takes about three lessons and a mild headache to explain.)


Real Data – Real Understanding

This is the real power of the Smart Cart.

Students:

  • Collect their own data
  • Analyse it instantly
  • Make mistakes
  • Fix them

It turns physics from:

“Copy this from the board…”

Into:

“Let’s prove it.”


Why It Matters

In exams, students are expected to:

  • Interpret graphs
  • Understand relationships
  • Apply knowledge

The Smart Cart trains the students in all of that — without them even realising.

It’s learning by doing.


Final Thought

Of course… there is one small problem.

Give students a Smart Cart and within 30 seconds someone will ask:

“Can we crash it into the wall?”

Well… yes.

But only in the name of science.

08 April 2026

Circles, Tangents and Chords – Why the Panic?

 


Circles, Tangents and Chords – Why the Panic?

There’s something about circles that seems to trigger instant fear in students.

Mention tangents, chords, or anything involving angles in a circle… and suddenly even confident GCSE (and A Level) students start to panic.

But here’s the truth:

These problems are not harder than anything else in maths.
They just look unfamiliar.


What Are We Actually Dealing With?

At GCSE level, circle questions usually boil down to a small set of rules:

1. Radius ⟂ Tangent

The radius meets the tangent at 90°.

This is your entry point into most problems.


2. Angles in the Same Segment Are Equal

If two angles sit on the same arc, they are identical.

Spot the arc → match the angles → easy marks.


3. Angle at Centre = 2 × Angle at Circumference

The angle in the middle is double the one at the edge.

This one appears again and again. Sometimes the top angle slips right round but it is still the same problem.


4. Cyclic Quadrilateral = 180°

Opposite angles add up to 180°.

A favourite exam trick.


So Why Do Students Struggle?

It’s not the maths.

It’s the recognition.

Students often:

  • Don’t spot which rule to use
  • Panic when the diagram looks messy
  • Forget that it’s just basic angle rules in disguise

My Top Tip (After 40 Years Teaching)

Circle the circle rules before you start solving.

Literally.

Look at the diagram and ask:

  • Where is the tangent?
  • Where is the centre?
  • Which angles sit on the same arc?

Then apply one rule at a time.


The Big Realisation

Once you see it:

Circle questions are just geometry puzzles with a small toolkit

Not scary. Not magical. Just structured.


A Bit of Honesty…

Students often say:

“I hate circle theorems.”

What they really mean is:

“I haven’t practised enough of them yet.”


Final Thought

If you practise these regularly, something interesting happens:

You start spotting the answers almost immediately

And that’s when circles go from:
confusing →  satisfying

07 April 2026

Skipping Electricity – A Beam Galvanometer Trick That Catches Students Out

 


Skipping Electricity – A Beam Galvanometer Trick That Catches Students Out


This is one of my favourite “gotcha” demonstrations in A-Level Physics — simple, slightly theatrical… and wonderfully misleading.

I hand a student a long loop of wire connected to a beam galvanometer. One strand of the loop is separated, and I ask them to rotate it in the air like a skipping rope.

The beam of light moves.

Perfect.

Then comes the fun bit.


The Trick

I casually announce:

“You see… it’s the student skipping that generates the electricity.”

At this point, someone usually tries actually jumping over the wire.

The beam still moves.

Now they’re convinced.

But they’re wrong.


What’s Really Happening?



The real physics has nothing to do with fitness levels.

This is a beautiful example of electromagnetic induction.

As the wire moves through the Earth’s magnetic field:

  • It cuts magnetic field lines
  • Charges in the wire experience a force
  • A small emf (voltage) is induced
  • A current flows — detected by the galvanometer

No batteries. No magic. Just motion and magnetism.


Why the Earth Matters



We often forget that the Earth’s magnetic field is always there.

It’s weak — but not zero.

And with a long enough wire and enough motion, it’s more than enough to produce a measurable effect.

That’s why this works so beautifully in the classroom.


The “Cancellation” Twist



Now repeat the experiment — but this time, the student holds both sides of the wire loop together.

They rotate it again.

Nothing.

No movement. No current.

Why?

  • Each side of the wire cuts the magnetic field
  • But in opposite directions
  • The induced currents are equal and opposite
  • They cancel out

Same effort. Same motion. Completely different result.


The Learning Moment

This is where the real teaching happens.

Students initially focus on:

  • The movement
  • The person
  • The action (skipping!)

But they miss the key idea:

It’s not movement alone — it’s movement through a magnetic field.

Once they see it, everything clicks.


Why This Experiment Works So Well

  • It challenges assumptions
  • It creates a deliberate misconception
  • It forces students to explain, not just observe
  • It links theory directly to a physical experience

And most importantly…

It gets them thinking like physicists.


In the Lab

There’s always a moment when a student says:

“Wait… it’s not the skipping, is it?”

That’s the moment you know the lesson has landed.

06 April 2026

St Mark’s Fly – The Bringer of Spring (and Blossom)

 
St Mark’s Fly – The Bringer of Spring (and Blossom)

If you’ve been out walking in late April or early May and noticed clouds of slightly clumsy-looking black flies hovering above hedgerows, footpaths, or your garden… congratulations — spring has properly arrived.

Meet the St Mark’s Fly (Bibio marci), affectionately (or not!) known as the “dangle fly” thanks to its long legs that seem to hang loosely beneath it as it flies.

Why “St Mark’s” Fly?

These insects are named after St Mark's Day, because they typically emerge right around 25th April — almost like clockwork. Nature’s calendar at work. This year earlier because of climate change? Although the females hatch before the maLES.

What Are They Doing?

Those swarms aren’t random chaos — they’re actually mating gatherings.

  • Males hover in groups, waiting for females
  • Females fly into the swarm briefly
  • Nature takes its course… efficiently!

After mating, females lay eggs in the soil. The larvae then get to work underground.

The Gardeners (You Didn’t Know You Had)

While the adults might seem a bit of a nuisance, their larvae are surprisingly useful:

  • They feed on decaying organic matter
  • Help break down soil nutrients
  • Improve soil structure

In other words, they’re part of your garden’s invisible workforce.

Pollination Helpers

Adults often visit flowers — especially spring blossom — feeding on nectar. In doing so, they contribute (quietly and accidentally) to pollination.

Not quite as glamorous as bees… but still doing their bit.

A Slightly Awkward Flyer

If you watch them closely, St Mark’s flies don’t exactly glide like swallows. They:

  • Fly slowly
  • Drift about unpredictably
  • Occasionally bump into you

They’re harmless — just a bit… enthusiastic.

The St Mark’s fly is one of those wonderful seasonal markers. Like daffodils, lambs in fields, or the first day you don’t need a coat, their arrival quietly signals:

Spring is here. Life is waking up again.

And next time you walk through one of those hovering swarms… just remember:

You’re not being attacked — you’re walking through a mid-air singles bar.

But it wasn't the only fly in the Garden so out came ...

The Garden Detective

“and the Case of the Not-So-Mark’s Fly”



It started, as these things often do, with confidence.

“There it is,as I showed if to my wife” I said, camera in hand.
“A St Mark’s Fly. Spring has arrived. Job done.”

Except…this one wasn’t.


The First Clue

On closer inspection, this “St Mark’s Fly” looked… wrong.

  • Too slim
  • Too yellow
  • Not nearly hairy enough
  • And standing there like it owned the flowerpot

Not the chunky, slightly bumbling insect I was expecting.


The Investigation

Out came the mental checklist (and a few photos):

  • Size? About 1 cm
  • Colour? Golden-yellow
  • Legs? Long and purposeful
  • Habitat? Plant pot, damp soil, organic matter

This was no casual visitor.

This was a professional.


The Reveal

The culprit is:

👉 Scathophaga stercoraria

Otherwise known as the yellow dung fly.

Not the most glamorous name…
…but far more interesting than it sounds.


What’s It Doing in My Garden?

Despite the name, it’s not just hanging around dung.

These flies:

  • Patrol soil, compost, and vegetation
  • Act as predators of smaller insects
  • Are part of the garden’s natural pest control team

In other words…

 It’s one of the good guys


A Case of Mistaken Identity

So what happened?

I saw:

  • A spring fly
  • Roughly the right size
  • Sitting in the garden

…and jumped to conclusions.

Classic.


The Lesson

Not everything buzzing about in April is a St Mark’s fly.

Some are:

  • Quiet hunters
  • Garden helpers
  • And far more interesting than they first appear

Final Thoughts

The garden is full of these little mysteries.

You think you’re photographing one thing
…and end up discovering something entirely different.

And that’s half the fun.


Garden Detective verdict:
Case closed… but the investigation continues.

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

Chemistry Calculations – Easy… Until Rates Appear!

  Chemistry Calculations – Easy… Until Rates Appear! “It Was All Going So Well… Then They Asked for the Rate” Chemistry calculations are, f...