Friday 27 March 2020

Best A Level Calculator

Best for A level Maths and Science For science it is a Periodic table and list of all the Physical constants. It sketches out he graphs for Maths but used in science too. There are many addons ( and games) available for the calculator. These calculator makes short work of the A level Maths and helps too with the science. Although geared at A-Level this calculator works well at GCSE too However - it is one of the few calculators where you really do need to read the manual first.

Monday 16 March 2020

Using your phone effectively in science


It’s a camera, but better it’s a video camera, and slo-mo at that. Start recording your experiments. Use the phone to make video notes or get an app like Notetalker to record a lesson and all the slides. This makes revision a breeze.
So do you have to write up an experiment? Did the results get messed up? But did you manage to video the experiment - all the equipment is there, how it was setup, what you did, what was said. A photo of the results helps, especially with character recognition and turning results into graphs.
 

Tuesday 10 March 2020

The wood and Metal Tube

I have a metal and wood rod. I wrap it with a piece of white paper and then put this into a burner. As I heat the rod one side becomes burnt but the other side ( the metal side) stays uncharred. Why is this?
Watch https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=y7p-kUshVDk

Friday 28 February 2020

The Best GCSE Calculator


The features on this make many of the problems much easier to solve.
For calculator papers this the polynomial solving feature alone ( quadratic formula) makes this calculator worth it, but also with the tables, the ratio solver and the simultaneous equation solver makes this calculator a must for GCSE Maths. I know I bought two of them and recommend them to my students.
Casio FX-991EX CLASSWIZ

Ball Bearing in Free fall

A ball bearing being dropped and thrown. taken with a strobe flash. Although the ball bearing on the right is moving towards the right it is falling at the same rate as the ball that is dropped. It doesn't seem obvious but that's science.

Saturday 22 February 2020

Malus Law


Shining a light through two polarising lenses. The first cuts out all the light except in one plane. Rotating the other into a plane at 90 degrees, can wipe out the other. Try looking at a led TV screen (polarised light) with polarising lenses and see what happens as you rotate them.

Saturday 15 February 2020

A Really Sharp Pencil

The most useful item in a student's toolkit is the sharp pencil, long enough to hold and make sure its really sharp. Always have one pencil or better still two. Used lots in Science and Maths too. For graph work a sharp pencil can get an extra mark for those points being accurate, and a sharp pencil improves the line. A good rubber (not one on the end of a pencil) makes the mistakes easier to change.

Exam Practice

  Running out of exam questions. Some students have been improving their skills by doing loads of exam questions, but what happens when you ...