1st Edition

Science Homework for Key Stage 2 Activity-based Learning

    90 Pages 78 B/W Illustrations
    by Routledge

    96 Pages 78 B/W Illustrations
    by Routledge

    Science Homework for Key Stage 2 is a unique resource for busy teachers - a selection of ‘pencil-free’, hands-on activities, aligned with the National Curriculum Programmes of Study and with clear links to the topics set out in the QCA scheme of work for KS2 science, that teachers can use as extension activities or give to pupils as homework to do with members of their family or friends. Each of the activities encourages the pupils to learn through discussion and through practical activities utilising everyday resources.

    Each activity is quick and easy for pupils and teachers to manage, and includes:

      • a learning aim, full, clear instructions and discussion points
      • tasks to foster collaboration and partnership between pupils, parents and teachers
      • photocopiable resources.

    A refreshing approach for teachers and pupils, these activities will foster enthusiasm for learning and inspire pupils' interest in science.

    Guidance for the teacher  Introduction  Pedagogy and philosophy  Active Homework – the key ideas  Following up on the homework  Possible follow-up activities  Partnership with parents  Creating your own active homework  Life processes and living things: Years three and four  Teeth and eating: types of teeth  Teeth and eating: looking after your teeth  Helping plants grow well: light  Helping plants grow well – growth  Devising an investigation: best temperature  Moving and growing: bones Moving and growing: muscles and joints  Habitats: plants  Habitats: food chains  Debate: is it right to keep animals in zoos?  Life processes and living things: Years five and six  Keeping healthy: food types  Keeping healthy: breakfast cereals  Keeping healthy: exercise   Debate: which is most important: a healthy diet or taking regular exercise  Lifecycles: plants  Interdependence and Adaptation  Micro-organisms: types of microbes  Micro-organisms: your questions  Micro-organisms - composting  Devising an investigation: best conditions for compost  Materials and their properties: Years three and four  Characteristics of materials: what would you use …?  Rocks and soils: House materials Rocks and soils: erosion  Rocks and soils: volcanoes  Devising an investigation: strongest rock  Keeping warm (thermal insulators): comparing materials  Keeping warm (thermal insulators): slowing the transfer of heat energy  Keeping warm (thermal insulators): insulation in the home  Solids, liquids and separating: teabags and sieving?  Solids, liquids and separating: sieving  Materials and their properties: Years five and six  Gases around us: gases you know  Gases around us: is air real stuff? Debate: driving versus using the bus  Changing State: liquid and gas  Changing state: solid and liquid  Changing state: evaporation  Dissolving: mixing solids with water  Dissolving: reversing the process  Devising an investigation: best conditions for dissolving  Reversible and non-reversible change: mixing and heating  Reversible and non-reversible change: your questions Reversible and non-reversible change: the water cycle  Physical properties: Years three and four  Magnets and springs: true and false Magnets and springs: paper springs  Magnets and springs: searching for magnets and springs at home  Light and shadows: opaque, translucent and transparent  Light and shadows: changing shadows  Friction: slipping and gripping  Friction: reducing friction  Physical properties: Years five and six  Earth, Sun, Moon: day and night  Earth, Sun, Moon: phases of the moon  Debate: is space exploration good use of money Changing sounds: sound travels  Changing sounds: sound travels more slowly than light  Changing sounds: directing and collecting sounds  Changing sounds: changing pitch  Forces in action: building structures  Forces in action: friction in sport  Forces in action: a thought experiment  Devising an investigation: shoe with best grip  How we see things: reflected light  How we see things: pupils responding to light  How we see things: your questions

    Biography

    Colin Forster is the primary science team co-ordinator and primary PGCE course leader at the University of Gloucestershire.

    Vicki Parfitt is an experienced primary school teacher and a member of the primary science team at the University of Gloucestershire.

    Andrea McGowan is an experienced primary school teacher and a member of the primary English team at the University of Gloucestershire.

    David Brookes is an illustrator and is a member of the Department of Natural and Social Sciences at the University of Gloucestershire.

    Marcelo Staricoff, primary teacher and deputy headteacher

    I am convinced that there is a very big market out there for interesting ways to approach homework and if approached creatively, as this series of books and mine do, then the benefits to children, families and schools can be huge. This proposal comes at a very good time as the issue of homework seems to have entered the national arena. There has been a lot of interest in the pros and cons of homework for primary schools but I think that hardly any school would say that they don’t set any. It is a definite practice with all schools and particularly with KS2. I think this series would be very helpful to teachers of younger children who may not think of giving homework because it involves ‘writing’. I think that the way the series is presented it is absolutely ideal for the younger children to get a feel for homework in a fun, non-pressurised way, with the help of adults and especially as it is based on practical activities. I firmly believe that the rationale for this book is absolutely spot on. Teachers are dissatisfied with current arrangements and regard homework as an extra problem in their lives which they have to set but find it hard to engage with process in a positive manner. The wish to make it fun and to involve the parents are two crucial factors in favour of this series. I believe that involving parents/carers and promoting discussion of learning at home is the future for primary education and from personal experience I know that the benefits are immense! The wonderful thing about the rationale of this series is that the children will not be seeing it as a chore but as playful learning.

    Anna Archer, primary teacher (UK, New Zealand, US)

    I definitely think there is a market for this type of series. Once schools, students and parents consider the benefit of this type of homework as opposed to the traditional worksheet format I think they will support it 100%. Most of the homework activity books I have come across are worksheet based and require students to fill in a space, colour sections in or draw a picture. I think the idea is fantastic and the example sheets are great. The aims are simple for anyone to help with and use materials lying around at home. The questions for thinking about and discussing are clear and open-ended, which encourages the students to think beyond yes or no, but more in-depth. I definitely think there is a market for these types of books especially for the frazzled teacher.

    From reading through the proposal and sample examples I think these books are stronger than the ones on the market. The objectives/aims tie in with the QCA and NSL Framework. These books encourage the students to think for themselves while doing and becoming independent learners. However, each school would need to make a commitment to make it a school-wide policy and on parent-teacher nights to introduce this to the parents, so they understand fully, as they have a bigger role to play.

    I have taught in many different settings and countries around the world and in all the settings teachers gave homework, however varied it was. This series would be helpful for the teacher who already gives homework as a way to spark new practical ideas while supporting schemes of work as well as encouraging the teacher who doesn’t commonly give homework. My experience of giving homework has been hands on kinesthetic activities, similar to the examples in this proposal I like to incorporate using the multiple intelligences in the homework too because this encourages the students to use their brain in more ways than one.

    John Taylor, distance learning development officer and David Fulton author

    [There is a market for this series,] particularly in schools with literate, co-operative parents, and those schools which follow the QCA schemes. The beauty of the proposal is the linking in with QCA. Schools can integrate homework tasks into their planning.

    This is an excellent idea, particularly if the activity is in preparation for the next day’s lesson and that carers and children are aware that the activity will enhance what they are to learn rather than simply being an add-on to what they’ve done in school. Science particularly lends itself to this hands-on approach as does Maths to some degree. There is a lot to be gained by having the children primed before a piece of classwork is introduced.

    Designing a range of varied pen-less activities for literacy may be a challenge. There’s probably a limit to how many "talk to …… about …" tasks a parent can take; especially if they have more than 1 KS 2 child.

    This approach really needs to be introduced properly to parents as a school policy. It needs parents to understand that they can help their child(ren)’s learning, that these activities really do contribute, and that it is all right for children to "enjoy" homework!