Health & Social Care Shop #HSCresources #tlevelhealth
Average Rating4.67
(based on 665 reviews)
Level 2 & 3 Health & Social Care and T-Level resources both free and small charge ; use the search facility and I hope you find what you need. Supporting teachers
Level 2 & 3 Health & Social Care and T-Level resources both free and small charge ; use the search facility and I hope you find what you need. Supporting teachers
A 55 slide PowerPoint designed to run over a 6 week period covering Health Topics; alcohol, smoking, drugs, diet and exercise for tutors to use during tutor time (Year 11, 12 or 13). Along side this is a 8 page booklet for students to answer questions and evidence their learning. Both resources can be adapted and added to, to suit your teaching style and meet curriculum needs for your audience.
Unfortunatly, lots of drug video resources are blocked at my school so some videos are American teenagers but there’sno reference to America and they are suitable for a British teenage audience.
#hscresources TES shop has free and small charge teaching packages
Join the biggest subject team, Health and Social Care Resources Facebook group. 5,000 sharing ideas, resources, signposting and prop each other out
This is a resource package for teaching the New BTEC HSC Level 3, Unit 1 Human Growth and Development through Life Stages, A2 Intellectual Development and covers all that’s on the spec. It has a 17 page booklet you can add to or alter, which has presentation note pages for the 4 PowerPoints, activities and homework tasks so it’s pretty engaging and the student can print it of and refer to sections themselves for revision. There is an A2 exam paper and easy-to-use mark scheme to check progress on this section too.
The content includes:-
PowerPoint introduction > In infancy and early childhood there is rapid growth in intellectual and language skills:
PowerPoint > Piaget’s model of how children’s logic and reasoning develops – stages of cognitive development, the development of schemas, his tests of conservation, egocentrism and how his model may explain children’s thoughts and actions
PowerPoint > Chomsky’s model in relation to how children acquire language – Language Acquisition Device (LAD), the concept of a critical period during which children may learn language, which may explain how children seem to instinctively gain language.
In early adulthood, thinking becomes realistic and pragmatic, with expert knowledge about, the practical aspects of life that permits judgement about important matters.
PowerPoint > The effects of age on the functions of memory:
• memory loss in later adulthood
There’s a Facebook group with 5,000 health and social care sharing ideas and resources, come and join the big subject team :-)
#hscresources TES shop for free and small charge resources
Thank you
Alison
This is a complete package that has a booklet and week by week programme for Unit one as well as an engaging 18 page booklet covering the A1 part of the spec, which you can add to or alter, getting students to print it off in advance of the lessons.
There are 8 PowerPoints included covering all sections in more detail and having embedded videos and corresponding activities in the booklet to complete either as a classroom activity or a homework task. There are also relevant exam questions from past papers to get them in the swing. This booklet took two whole days to put together so it is guaranteed to save you time and enable you to mould resources to your own teaching style. There is also an mock exam paper for A1 and mark scheme to check progress too.
Content covered
Growth and development are different concepts:
principles of growth – growth is variable across different parts of the body and is measured using height, weight and dimensions
principles of development – development follows an orderly sequence and is the acquisition of skills and abilities.
In infancy (0–2 years), the individual develops gross and fine motor skills:
• the development of gross motor skills
• the development of fine motor skills
• milestones set for the development of the infant – sitting up, standing, cruising, walking.
In early childhood (3–8 years), the individual further develops gross and fine motor skills:
riding a tricycle, running forwards and backwards, walking on a line, hopping on one foot, hops, skips and jumps confidently
turns pages of a book, buttons and unbuttons clothing, writes own name, joins up writing.
In adolescence (9–18 years), the changes surrounding puberty:
• development of primary and secondary sexual characteristics
• the role of hormones in sexual maturity.
In early adulthood (19–45 years), the individual reaches physical maturity:
physical strength peaks, pregnancy and lactation occur
perimenopause – oestrogen levels decrease, causing the ovaries to stop producing an egg each month. The reduction in oestrogen causes physical and emotional symptoms, to include hot flushes, night sweats, mood swings, loss of libido and vaginal dryness.
In middle adulthood (46–65 years), the female enters menopause:
• causes and effects of female menopause and the role of hormones in this o effects of the ageing process in middle adulthood.
In later adulthood (65+ years), there are many effects of ageing:
health and intellectual abilities can deteriorate
For more BTEC Level 1/2 Tech Award and BTEC Level 3 Health and Social Care resources, NCFE T-Level Health, CTEC Level 1 and 2 resources, visit the HSCresources Shop, to access the full range of resource packages, with a handy search facility, to save time.
I hope you enjoy the time you’ve saved!
This is a complete resource package with 7 engaging and interesting PowerPoints which are embedded in a 15 page booklet with accompanying activities and exam question practice, covering the new BTEC Health & Social care Unit 1 Human Lifespan Development, B2 and B3 spec content. You can save on printing and get students to print off the booklet, which you have the opportunity to tailor make to your own teaching. Included a link to a 90 mark exam paper with easy to follow mark scheme to allow for peer marking.
The content covers all aspects of this section of the spec…
B2 Genetic factors that affect development
Genetic predispositions to particular conditions – cystic fibrosis, brittle bone disease, phenylketonuria (PKU), Huntington’s disease, Klinefelter’s syndrome, Down’s syndrome, colour blindness, Duchenne muscular dystrophy.
Susceptibility to diseases such as cancer, high blood cholesterol and diabetes.
Biological factors that affect development – foetal alcohol syndrome, effects of maternal infections and lifestyle/diet during pregnancy, congenital defects.
B3 Environmental factors that affect development
Exposure to pollution – respiratory disorders, cardiovascular problems, allergies.
Poor housing conditions – respiratory disorders, cardio vascular problems, hypothermia and anxiety and depression.
Access to health and social care services – availability of transport, opening hours of services, ability to understand the needs and requirements of particular services.
For other parts of the Unit 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 7, 10, 11, 12, 20, 26 spec, follow me on TES and take a wander through the free and low cost resource packages which cover all the exam board spec.
PLEASE LEAVE A REVIEW FOR THIS RESOURCE, THANK YOU :-)
For more free and small charge T-Level Health Science, BTEC and CTEC Health and Social Care resources, visit my shop and use the handy search facility to find what you need easily.
There’s a Facebook group with 5,000 health and social care sharing ideas and resources, come and join the big subject team :-)
#hscresources TES shop for free and small charge resources
I hope you find this very useful and your student enjoys the learning.
Alison
This is a complete resource package for teaching the new BTEC Unit 1 C1 Physical changes in aging part of the spec. There are thirteen PowerPoints covering a range of changes such as AMD, cataracts, glaucoma, cardiovascular disease, Alzheimer’s and depression as well as the lowering of the immune system and risks to older people’s health. There is a 15 page booklet that can be added to or adapted to your style of teaching, which has note space for the PowerPoints, activities and practice exam questions.
The C1 content covered, is as below:-
Cardiovascular disease – age can increase the risks of cardiovascular disease. This can be exacerbated by lifestyle choices, diagnosis and treatment
Osteoarthritis, symptoms, treatment and life with this condition
Degeneration of the nervous tissue, an overview
Degeneration of the sense organs; tests and treatments
o Cataracts
o AMD
o Retinopathy
o glaucoma
o hearing impaired
The reduced absorption of nutrients.
Dementia, to include Alzheimer’s disease.
Effects of illnesses that are common in ageing.
There’s a Facebook group with 5,000 health and social care sharing ideas and resources, come and join the big subject team :-)
#hscresources TES shop for free and small charge resources
For more resource packages for BTEC Level 1/23, follow me on TES and find them all in the same place with a handy search facility
Happy teaching! :-) Alison
This is a collection of eight PowerPoints that cover some of the sensory systems section of the Unit 4 Anatomy and Physiology, as below. Some have activities, others have video’s embedded so you can develop activities to in your own teaching style to aid student memory
6.1 Structure of the eye
• pupil
• iris
• tear glands
• humours or fluids
• conjunctiva
• cornea
• retina
• macula
• optic nerve
• ciliary muscle/suspensory ligaments
• lens
6.2 Structure of the ear
• external
• middle
• inner ear
• eardrum
• stapes/incus/malleus ear bones
• cochlea
• organ of Corti
• Eustachian tube
• round window
• auditory nerve
• semi-circular canals
• ampullae
6.3 Malfunctions of eye and ear – possible causes and effects, i.e.
• eye - glaucoma, AMD, cataracts, retinopathy
• ear – deafness
6.4 Monitoring, treatment and care needs for malfunctions of the eye and the ear (e.g. impacts on lifestyle, visual aids, auditory aids, medication, biopsies, scans, medication, dialysis)
There’s a Facebook group with 5,000 health and social care sharing ideas and resources, come and join the big subject team :-)
#hscresources TES shop for free and small charge resources
For more CTEC or BTEC Level 2 and 3 Health and Social Care resources, free and small charge, visit my shop to find the full range, all in the same place with a handy search facility :-)
This item is a resource package, which consists of a 25 page interactive student booklet for the BTEC Health and Social Care Level 3 Unit 3 Anatomy and Physiology B5 Muscular System AND B7 Nervous System. Ypu can add to or alter the booklet to suit your own teaching style.
Along with this, is the fourteen engaging PowerPoints and additional work sheet tasks, card match activities and exam questions, that go with it, as well as a dice rolling fun revision game for students to identify areas they do not yet fully understand.
PowerPoints are well designed and have embedded videos in them, with booklet pages for students to make notes and example of possible exam questions that may be asked. Included is an exam paper covering just this topic to check progress with an easy to understand mark scheme for optional peer marking to save on your time.
B5. The structure, function and main disorders of the muscular system
• The structure of striated muscle
• How muscles are attached to the body: tendons, fascia.
• Types of contraction: isometric, concentric, eccentric.
• Function of the muscular system: movement – antagonistic pairs (agonist, antagonist), synergist, fixator.
Location and action of major muscles, to include:-
erector spinae, rectus abdominis, internal and external obliques, biceps brachii, triceps brachii, deltoids, pectoralis major, trapezius, latissimus dorsi, gluteus maximus, semimembranosus, semitendinosus, biceps femoris, adductors, rectus femoris, vastus lateralis, vastus medialis, vastus intermedius, tibialis anterior, gastrocnemius, soleus.
Diagnostic technique
A dysfunction of the muscular system
• muscular dystrophy
B7. The structure, function and main disorders of the nervous system
• The central nervous system (CNS)
• The structure and function of the brain and spinal cord
• Co-ordination of both voluntary and involuntary activities of the body.
• The peripheral nervous system – motor neurones, sensory neurones, nerve cells.
• The parasympathetic nervous system and sympathetic nervous system.
• Conduction of nerve impulses to and from the CNS; passage of a nerve
Diagnostic techniques
• Evoked Visual Response testing for optic nerve myelin sheath damage
• Lumbar puncture
Dysfunctions of the nervous system
• Parkinson’s disease
• Multiple Sclerosis (MS),
• Dementia.
I have other booklets and resource packages to cover the whole Unit 3 Anatomy and Physiology spec, add me as a favourite on TES and my other resources will be in one place and there will be notifications when I add new resources too =
There’s a Facebook group with 5,000 health and social care sharing ideas and resources, come and join the big subject team :-)
#hscresources