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Barclayfox's Shop. Ready to use KS3 & KS4 lessons.

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No preparation required! Physics, Chemistry, Biology also Maths Complete and ready to use high quality science lessons that automatically navigate you and your class expertly through the lesson and activities. All answers are built in. For up to 60% off these resources visit www.foxteach.com. FREE resource, leave a positive review and email us your tes user name and the resource you'd like (to the same value). Contact Barclayfox at: foxteach@hotmail.com

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No preparation required! Physics, Chemistry, Biology also Maths Complete and ready to use high quality science lessons that automatically navigate you and your class expertly through the lesson and activities. All answers are built in. For up to 60% off these resources visit www.foxteach.com. FREE resource, leave a positive review and email us your tes user name and the resource you'd like (to the same value). Contact Barclayfox at: foxteach@hotmail.com
Hypotheses, theory acceptance, making predictions, peer review, scientific method, trial by evidence
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Hypotheses, theory acceptance, making predictions, peer review, scientific method, trial by evidence

(0)
A complete and ready to deliver high quality GCSE lesson from Barclayfox. This is a complete lesson from start to end, you do not need to spend many hours carefully planning, creating, resourcing and improving this lesson after each use. I have already spent those hours preparing this lesson for my students and improving it over many years. There is nothing to do but give it a quick look through and familiarise yourself with it. Lesson objectives: * Explain key words and phrases including “hypothesis”, “peer review”, “theory” and the “prediction”. * Explain the scientific method and how new hypotheses are validated by other scientists before they are accepted. * Understand trial by evidence. This carefully crafted lesson is over 40 slides long, and is full of learning activities as below: * Notes to help the teacher. * Starter 1 - unscramble the words. * Starter 2 - simple task where students self-assess themselves against the objectives. * Matching task - answers are provided. * Activity sheet - built into the powerpoint simply print this slide for each student. * Unscramble the words race. * Sequencing activity. * Gap fill activity - all answers are provided. * Quiz with answers. * Questions – all answers are provided. * Up and about activity * Theory slides (carefully sculpted, interspaced with learning activities, not ‘death by powerpoint’). * Differentiated questions with answers (ACTIVITY SHEETS built into powerpoint simply print them). * Play ball. * Paired work activities – answers are provided. * Scientific literacy activity. * Homework * Plenary is the activity sheets. * Student self-assessment versus objectives activity – so learners can judge for themselves how much they have learnt. As teachers we all work ridiculously long hours each week. Give yourself a break, spend some life with your wife / husband / children / friends / family by purchasing more lessons created by “Barclayfox” once they appear on TES. Please note: when searching for resources please type barclayfox into the search box/engine and it will show you all our resources. Please purchase this lesson, and leave a positive review. This lesson is part of a series, whilst they all work very well as standalone individual lessons you may wish to buy others from the series: 0. Bundle – contains all lessons (if available not all series are bundled) 1. History of the atom, discovery of the nucleus, Thompson and Rutherford. 2. Isotopes and Mass number and Atomic number. 3. Alpha, Beta and Gamma – ionising radiation. 4. Changes in the nucleus – decay equations 5-14. See this powerpoint for the list. Thank you, and happy teaching, Barclayfox.
Nuclear radiation uses in medicine, sterilisation, diagnosis, treatment, tracers, radiotherapy etc
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Nuclear radiation uses in medicine, sterilisation, diagnosis, treatment, tracers, radiotherapy etc

(1)
A complete and ready to deliver high quality GCSE lesson. This is a complete lesson from start to end, you do not need to spend many hours carefully planning, creating and resourcing this lesson – I have already spent those hours preparing this lesson for you. There is nothing to do – if you don’t have time to have a quick look through it in advance the PPT will guide you smoothly through the whole lesson ! Lesson objectives: * Understand key terms e.g. sterilisation, diagnosis, treatment, tracer, gamma camera, radiotherapy etc. * Explain how and why radiation is used in sterilisation, and medical diagnosis, and treatment. * Be able to explain radiotherapy in detail. This carefully crafted lesson is over 40 slides long, and is full of learning activities as below: * Notes to help the teacher. * Starter - simple task where students self-assess themselves against each objective. * Matching task – answers are provided. * Paired work activities – answers are provided. * Scientific literacy activity * Homework, you choose whether your learners need to do it (if a worksheet answers are provided). * Questions – all answers are provided. * Theory slides (carefully sculpted, interspaced with learning activities, not ‘death by powerpoint’). * Video clip link (carefully selected – this alone can save you 10 to 20 minutes of searching). * Gap fill activity - all answers are provided. * Sequencing activity. * Up and about activity. * Student self-assessment versus objectives activity – so learners can judge for themselves how much they have learnt. As teachers we all work ridiculously long hours each week. Give yourself a break, spend some life with your wife / husband / children / friends / family by purchasing more lessons created by “Barclayfox” once they appear on TES. Please note: when searching for resources please type barclayfox into the search box/engine and it will show you all our resources. If you like this lesson please leave a review. This lesson is part of a series, whilst they all work very well as standalone individual lessons you may wish to buy others from the series: 0. Bundle – contains all lessons (if available not all series are bundled) 1. History of the atom, discovery of the nucleus, Thompson and Rutherford. 2. Isotopes and Mass number and Atomic number. 3. Alpha, Beta and Gamma – ionising radiation. 4. Changes in the nucleus – decay equations 5. Half life, radioactivity and decay. 6. Activity and half life practicals 7. Dangers and precautions 8. Nuclear radiation in medicine (uses in medicine) 9. Nuclear fission and chain reactions (nuclear power). 10. Electricity from nuclear power. 11-14 Please see list in this powerpoint Link to the bundle - 50% discount! https://www.tes.com/teaching-resource/aqa-gcse-new-spec-atomic-structure-mega-pack-bundle-11795491 Thank you, and happy teaching ! Yours, Barclayfox.
First lesson with any new class is the most important lesson you will ever give! Complete lesson.
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First lesson with any new class is the most important lesson you will ever give! Complete lesson.

(2)
High quality lesson by Barclayfox for the first time you ever meet any class - complete lesson, ready to deliver, use it over and over again - for each new class, every year! The most important lesson you will ever give is the first one to each new class! Complete lesson, ready to use, you only need to spend 2 or 3 minutes completing the ‘who am I’ slide (a partly completed slide for this is included inside the lesson powerpoint). Key Stages: KS3 and KS4 and KS5. ALL subjects / ALL teachers. You can use it with your tutor group too ! Use this lesson to : Reduce the stress and pressure - on you and the students. Sort standards of behaviour. Improve your experience of the first ever lesson with a class. Improve your learners experience of their first ever lesson with you. The first lesson with a new class is the most important lesson you will ever teach. This is a truly critical lesson. It has been used and improved a huge number of times over many years. During the lesson you will: * Sort out the seating plan. * Learn students names. * Introduce yourself to the students. * Start to discover which students will (e.g. follow instructions, write, spell correctly) and which are reticent/less skilled. * Set and agree class rules. * Rewards - find out which rewards the learners care enough about to try and get. * Set expectations of behaviour * Ensure students recognise your authority as the teacher. * Help learners understand why work ethic is so important. * Learn about individual learners needs. * Learn about their individual likes (important in building relationships) * Learn about their individual dislikes (important in building relationships) * Start to build those critical relationships. * Start to coach / motivate the students about learning. This is an excellent lesson - I use it repeatedly with every new class from KS3 to KS5. Whether you are a new teach or a very experienced one this is a small investment for a great lesson to improve your experience and outcomes when you meet every class for the very first time. Use it over and over again during the first week of school - excellent value. Happy teaching ! Yours, Barclayfox Key words: first lesson, behaviour, ice breaker, icebreaker, first time meet, complete first lesson, first secondary lesson, first maths lesson, first English lesson, first science lesson, first French lesson, first history lesson, first geography lesson, first tutor group lesson, introduction, classroom expectations, setting standards, start up lesson, new class introduction, meeting your new class for the first time, new teacher, my new class, back to school, meet the teacher, B4L, behaviour for learning, behavior for learning, behaviour management, behavior management, setting expectations, class rules, transition, all about me.
New class lesson, ice breakers, back to school, first lesson,  KS3, KS4 or other year groups
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New class lesson, ice breakers, back to school, first lesson, KS3, KS4 or other year groups

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Lesson for the first time you ever meet any class - complete lesson. Use it over and over again during week 1 Complete lesson, ready to use, you only need to spend 2 minutes completing the ‘who am I’ slide in this powerpoint. Key Stages: KS3 and KS4 and KS5. (You could even use it with KS2). ALL subjects: yes, really, all subjects and you can use it with your tutor group too ! Use this lesson to : Reduce the stress and pressure. Improve your experience of the first ever lesson with a class. Improve your learners experience of their first ever lesson with you. The first lesson with a new class is the most important lesson you will ever teach. You need to give this lesson to each of your new classes. Assuming you have 12 classes and your teaching career lasts 20 years you can use it 240 times! I’ve lost count of the number of times I have delivered this excellent lesson, this truly critical lesson. It has been used and improved a huge number of times over many years. During the lesson you will: * Sort out the seating plan. * Learn names. * Introduce yourself to the students. * Get to know the students. * Set and agree class rules. * Rewards - find out which rewards they care enough about to try and get. * Set expectations of behaviour and ensure students recognise your authority as the teacher. * Help learners understand why work ethic is so important. * Learn about individual learners needs. * Learn about their individual likes (helps build relationships) * Learn about their individual dislikes (helps build relationships) * Start to build relationships. * Start to coach / motivate the students about learning. This is an excellent lesson - I use it with every new class and whether you are a new teach or a very experienced one this is a small investment for a great lesson to improve your experience and outcomes when you meet a class for the very first time. Happy teaching ! Yours, Barclayfox Key words: back to school, first lesson, ice breaker, first time meet, complete first lesson, first secondary lesson, first maths lesson, first English lesson, first science lesson, first French lesson, first history lesson, first geography lesson, first tutor group lesson, first lesson in, introduction, classroom expectations, setting standards, start up lesson, new class introduction, meeting your new class for the first time, new teacher, new class, back to school, meet the teacher, B4L, behaviour for learning, behavior for learning, behaviour management, behavior management, setting expectations, class rules.
Radiation dangers, safety, risk, precautions. ionisation, irradiation, contamination, Marie Curie
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Radiation dangers, safety, risk, precautions. ionisation, irradiation, contamination, Marie Curie

(1)
Dangers of radiation. A complete and ready to deliver high quality GCSE lesson from Barclayfox. There is nothing to do ! Even if you do not have time to look at it in advance it is not a problem as the PPT will lead you smoothly through the lesson. Lesson objectives: Understand the dangers of “ionising” radiation and the damage they can cause (ManKinD). Know how to safely handle radioactive sources and protect yourself (TarDiS) Understand contamination and irradiation. Explain how ideas about the world can change. Please note: This lesson does not cover “uses” as they are covered in the Barclayfox lesson 8 of this topic. This lesson is called “Nuclear radiation uses in medicine”. My lessons cover the whole of this “atomic structure” topic but do not blindly follow the textbook order instead they use a structure that has proved highly successful over many years. Uses in medicine lesson is here: https://www.tes.com/teaching-resource/nuclear-radiation-uses-in-medicine-sterilisation-diagnosis-treatment-tracers-radiotherapy-etc-11703961 This carefully crafted lesson is over 30 slides long, and is full of learning activities some are noted below: * ALL answers are provided throughout! * Starter - recaps previous lessons (with answers). * Paired work activities. * Scientific literacy activity. * Homeworks - 2 - you choose. * Questions. * Theory slides (carefully sculpted, interspaced with learning activities, not ‘death by powerpoint’). * Video clip link (carefully selected – this alone can save you a lot of searching). * Gap fill activity. * Unscramble the words race. * Plenary quiz. * Student self-assessment versus objectives activity. As teachers we all work ridiculously long hours each week. Give yourself a break, spend some life with your loved ones, press buy now! If you like this lesson please leave a review. This lesson is part of a Bundle/series, and you may wish to buy others from the series: 0. Bundle – contains all lessons (if available not all series are bundled) 1. History of the atom and the discovery of the nucleus. 2. Isotopes and Mass number and Atomic number. 3. Alpha, Beta and Gamma – ionising radiation. 4. Changes in the nucleus – decay equations 5. Half life, radioactivity and decay 6. Activity practicals 7. Radiation dangers, safety, risk and precautions 8. Nuclear radiation in medicine (uses in medicine) 9. Nuclear fission and chain reactions (nuclear power). 10. Electricity from nuclear power. 11. Nuclear Fusion and our sun. 12. Nuclear issues including waste 13. Hypotheses, theory acceptance and peer review. 14. Revision. Bundle gives you a near 50% discount! Here’s the link https://www.tes.com/teaching-resource/aqa-gcse-new-spec-atomic-structure-mega-pack-bundle-11795491 Thank you, and happy teaching! Happy days ! Barclayfox.
History of the atom, discovery of the nucleus, Thompson, Rutherford, Alpha particle scattering, Bohr
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History of the atom, discovery of the nucleus, Thompson, Rutherford, Alpha particle scattering, Bohr

(1)
A complete and ready to deliver high quality KS4 / GCSE lesson from Barclayfox. Updated 20th October 2017. This is a complete lesson from start to end. You do not need to spend a huge number of hours carefully planning it and writing differentiated resources, I have already spent those hours creating this great lesson. Furthermore it has been improved time and again after each use - it is tried and tested, you will not find better. There is nothing for you to do but give it a quick look through and familiarise yourself with it. Lesson objectives - I can: *Describe the structure of the atom (Protons, neutrons, electrons: charges, masses and locations). * Explain the history of our model of the atom (billiard ball model, plum pudding model, nuclear model, planetary model, quantum mechanical model). * Describe Rutherford’s experiment which led to the discovery of the nucleus This carefully crafted lesson is over 40 slides long, has differentiated activity sheets (with answers), and is full of learning activities as below: * Simple starter - self assess vs objectives * Matching task - answers are provided. * Differentiated activity sheets - support, medium ability, high ability. * Activity sheet - answers. * Sequencing activity. * Gap fill activity - all answers are provided. * Quiz with answers. * Questions – all answers are provided * Theory slides (carefully sculpted, interspaced with learning activities, not ‘death by powerpoint’). * Video clip links (carefully selected – this alone can save you 20+ minutes of searching). * Paired work activities – answers are provided. * Homework worksheet * Scientific literacy activities. * Plenary formative / summative assessment quiz / activity. * Student self-assessment versus objectives activity – learners judge for themselves how much they have learnt. As teachers we all work ridiculously long hours each week. Give yourself a break, spend some life with your friends and family by purchasing more lessons created by “Barclayfox” once they appear on TES. Please note: when searching for resources please type barclayfox into the search box/engine and it will show you all our resources. Please purchase this lesson, and leave a positive review. This lesson is part of a series, whilst they all work very well as standalone individual lessons you may wish to buy others from the series: 0. Bundle – contains all lessons (if available not all my series are bundled) 1. Atoms, history of the atom and discovery of the nucleus. THIS LESSON. 2. Isotopes and Mass number and Atomic number. 3. Alpha, Beta and Gamma – ionising radiation. 4. Changes in the nucleus – decay equations 5 to 14 Please read the list in the powerpoint. Happy teaching ! Yours, Barclayfox.
Radiation, atomic structure, half life, discovery of the nucleus, changes in the nucleus, Revision
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Radiation, atomic structure, half life, discovery of the nucleus, changes in the nucleus, Revision

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This is a revision lesson that makes use of many games, activities, work sheets and loop puzzles to revise the following:- Radioactivity, radiation, atoms, isotopes, activity, half life, alpha, beta, gamma, the discovery of the nucleus, changes in the nucleus, alpha scattering. Rutherford, how our model of the atom has changed over time, radiation uses and dangers, nuclear radiation in medicine, fission and fusion. Excellent tried and tested resources which are ready to be used, and some of which are differentiated. Answer sheets are also provided to allow student independence and peer or self assessment. As teachers we all work ridiculously long hours each week. Give yourself a break, spend some life with your wife / husband / children / friends / family by purchasing more lessons created by “Barclayfox” once they appear on TES. Please note: when searching for resources please type barclayfox into the search box/engine and it will show you all our resources. Please purchase this lesson, and leave a positive review. This lesson is part of a series, whilst they all work very well as standalone individual lessons you may wish to buy others from the series: 0. Bundle – contains all lessons (if available not all series are bundled) 1. Atoms, radiation and the discovery of the nucleus. 2. Isotopes and Mass number and Atomic number. 3. Alpha, Beta and Gamma – ionising radiation. 4. Changes in the nucleus – decay equations 5. Activity and half life 6. Activity and half life practicals 7. Dangers and precautions 8. Nuclear radiation in medicine (uses in medicine) 9. Nuclear fission and chain reactions (nuclear power). 10. Electricity from nuclear power. 11. Nuclear Fusion and our sun. 12. Nuclear issues including waste 13. Prediction, theory acceptance and peer review 14. Revision Lesson - THIS ONE Thank you, and happy teaching! Yours, Barclayfox.
Nuclear issues, background radiation, Radon gas, Chernobyl, Fukushima, nuclear waste, Gen 3 reacto
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Nuclear issues, background radiation, Radon gas, Chernobyl, Fukushima, nuclear waste, Gen 3 reacto

(1)
A complete and ready to deliver high quality GCSE lesson. This is a complete lesson from start to end, you do not need to spend many hours carefully planning, creating, resourcing and improving this lesson after each use. I have already spent those hours preparing this lesson for my students and improving it over many years. There is nothing to do but give it a quick look through and familiarise yourself with it. Lesson objectives: * Know what radon gas is, where it comes from and why it is dangerous. * Understand power stations produce dangerous radioactive waste and explain disposal methods. * Form your own opinions about nuclear power and its safety after studying the Chernobyl and Fukushima incidents. This carefully crafted lesson is over 40 slides long, and is full of learning activities as below: * Notes to help the teacher. * Help sheet (can be given to all, or only to those that the plenary shows found the lesson difficult, or given later to students who missed the lesson). * Starter - simple task where students self-assess themselves against the objectives. * Sequencing activity. * Gap fill activity - all answers are provided. * Quiz with answers. * Questions – all answers are provided. * Theory slides (carefully sculpted, interspaced with learning activities, not ‘death by powerpoint’). * Video clip link (carefully selected – this alone can save you 20+ minutes of searching). * Play ball. * Paired work activities – answers are provided. * Scientific literacy activity. * Plenary formative/summative assessment quiz / activity. * Student self-assessment versus objectives activity – so learners can judge for themselves how much they have learnt. As teachers we all work ridiculously long hours each week. Give yourself a break, spend some life with your wife / husband / children / friends / family by purchasing more lessons created by “Barclayfox” once they appear on TES. Please note: when searching for resources please type barclayfox into the search box/engine and it will show you all our resources. Please purchase this lesson, and leave a positive review. This lesson is part of a series, whilst they all work very well as standalone individual lessons you may wish to buy others from the series: 0. Bundle – contains all lessons (if available not all series are bundled) 1. Atoms, radiation and the discovery of the nucleus. 2. Isotopes and Mass number and Atomic number. 3. Alpha, Beta and Gamma – ionising radiation. 4. Changes in the nucleus – decay equations 5. Activity and half life 6. Activity and half life practicals 7. Dangers and precautions 8 to 14 - are listed in the powerpoint Thank you, and happy teaching! Yours, Barclayfox.
Nuclear fusion, the sun and stars. KS4
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Nuclear fusion, the sun and stars. KS4

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A complete KS4 lesson. Fusion, fission, hydrogen, proton, repulsion, repel, nuclei. Lesson objectives: * Explain the difference between nuclear “fusion” and nuclear “fission”. * Explain why nuclear fusion needs high temperatures and pressures. *Explain why mankind is finding it hard to make a practical and profitable fusion power station - a sun here on earth!!! This carefully crafted lesson is over 40 slides long, and is full of learning activities as below: * Notes to help the teacher. * Help sheet (can be given to all, or only to those that the plenary shows found the lesson difficult, or given later to students who missed the lesson). * Starter – unscramble. * Matching task – answers are provided. * Unscramble the words race. * Gap fill activity - all answers are provided. * Quiz with answers. * Questions – all answers are provided. * Up and about activity. * Theory slides (carefully sculpted, interspaced with learning activities, * Video clip link (carefully selected – this alone can save you 20+ minutes of searching). * Play ball. * Paired work activities – answers are provided. * Scientific literacy activity. * Homework, you choose whether your learners need to do it (if a worksheet answers are provided). * Plenary formative/summative assessment quiz / activity. * Student self-assessment versus objectives activity – so learners can judge for themselves how much they have learnt. Please purchase this lesson, and leave a positive review. This lesson is part of a series, whilst they all work very well as stand alone individual lessons you may wish to buy others from the series: 0. Bundle – contains all lessons (if available not all series are bundled) 1. Atoms, radiation and the discovery of the nucleus. 2. Isotopes and Mass number and Atomic number. 3. Alpha, Beta and Gamma – ionising radiation. 4. Changes in the nucleus – decay equations 5. Activity and half life 6. to 14 - see list in this powerpoint Thank you, and happy teaching! Yours, Barclayfox.
Generating electricity using nuclear power stations. Nuclear power plants. Fossil fuels, fission.
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Generating electricity using nuclear power stations. Nuclear power plants. Fossil fuels, fission.

(0)
A complete and ready to deliver high quality GCSE lesson. This is a complete lesson from start to end, you do not need to spend many hours carefully planning, creating, resourcing and improving this lesson after each use. I have already spent those hours preparing this lesson for my students and improving it over many years. There is nothing to do but give it a quick look through and familiarise yourself with it. Lesson objectives: * Describe the function of the parts of a nuclear power station. * Describe how this is different to using fossil fuels. * Discuss the advantages & disadvantages of nuclear power. This carefully crafted lesson is over 40 slides long, and is full of learning activities as below: * Notes to help the teacher. * Starter - simple task where students self-assess themselves against the objectives. * Activity sheets “Big Picture” - built into this powerpoint just print these slides as described. * Gap fill activity - all answers are provided. * Quiz with answers. * Questions – all answers are provided. * Up and about activity - during “Big Picture” activity. * Theory slides (carefully sculpted, interspaced with learning activities, not ‘death by powerpoint’). * Play ball. * Paired work activities – answers are provided. * Scientific literacy activity. * Plenary formative/summative assessment quiz / activity. * Student self-assessment versus objectives activity – so learners can judge for themselves how much they have learnt. As teachers we all work ridiculously long hours each week. Give yourself a break, spend some life with your wife / husband / children / friends / family by purchasing more lessons created by “Barclayfox” once they appear on TES. Please note: when searching for resources please type barclayfox into the search box/engine and it will show you all our resources. Please purchase this lesson, and leave a positive review. This lesson is part of a series, and you may wish to buy others from the series: 0. Bundle – contains all lessons (if available not all series are bundled) 1. Atoms, radiation and the discovery of the nucleus. 2. Isotopes and Mass number and Atomic number. 3. Alpha, Beta and Gamma – ionising radiation. 4. Changes in the nucleus – decay equations 5. Activity and half life 6. Activity and half life practicals 7. Dangers and precautions 8. Nuclear radiation in medicine (uses in medicine) 9. Nuclear fission and chain reactions (nuclear power). 10. Electricity from nuclear power. 11. Nuclear Fusion and our sun. 12. Nuclear issues including waste 13. Prediction, theory acceptance and peer review. 14. Revision Thank you, and happy teaching! Yours, Barclayfox.
Half life practicals - kinaesthetic and dice fully prepared. Radioactivity Graphs Decay Half-life.
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Half life practicals - kinaesthetic and dice fully prepared. Radioactivity Graphs Decay Half-life.

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Half life - complete KS4 lesson Lesson objectives: * Do a physical practical to deepen understanding of half life and decay. * Be able to plot and explain a decay curve. * Find half lives from a decay curves. half life half-life * Notes to help the teacher. * Starter - simple task where students self-assess themselves against the objectives. * Gap fill activity - all answers are provided. * Quiz with answers. * Questions – all answers are provided. * Up and about activity. * Theory slides (carefully sculpted, interspaced with learning activities, * Practical in groups – with scaffolding text and results table blank and expected results (as required) * Equipment list – to give to your technicians. * Kinaesthetic activity – to aid recall. * Differentiated questions with answers. * Play ball * Paired work activities – answers are provided. * Scientific literacy activity. * Student self-assessment versus objectives activity – so learners can judge for themselves how much they have learnt. Thank you, and happy teaching! Yours, Barclayfox.
Nuclear decay equations.
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Nuclear decay equations.

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A complete and ready to deliver KS3 lesson. Lesson objectives: * Explain that radioactive elements are unstable and emit alpha or beta particles when they change into other elements. * Explain what happens to the nucleus during alpha decay and beta decay and gamma decay. * Successfully write decay equations / nuclear equations. This carefully crafted lesson is over 40 slides long, and is full of learning activities as below: * Notes to help the teacher. * Starter – activity sheet (built into this powerpoint just print this one slide for each student, or project it) * Starter - simple task where students self-assess themselves against the objectives. * Activity sheet - built into this powerpoint just print this one slide for each student - ore project it. * Gap fill activity - all answers are provided. * Quiz with answers. * Questions – all answers are provided. * Theory slides (carefully sculpted, interspaced with learning activities, not ‘death by powerpoint’). * Physical model build activity - various colours of plasticine are required. * Kinaesthetic activity (as above) – to aid recall. * Play ball * Paired work activities – answers are provided. * Plenary formative/summative assessment quiz / activity. * Student self-assessment versus objectives activity – so learners can judge for themselves how much they have learnt. You’ve found what you need, waste no more of your valuable time! This lesson is part of a series, and you may wish to buy others from the series: 0. Bundle – contains all lessons (if available not all series are bundled) 1. Atoms, radiation and the discovery of the nucleus. 2. Isotopes and Mass number and Atomic number. 3. Alpha, Beta and Gamma – ionising radiation. 4. Changes in the nucleus – decay equations (THIS LESSON) 5. Activity and half life 6. Activity practicals 7. Dangers and precautions 8. Nuclear radiation in medicine (uses in medicine) 9 to 13. Etc etc please search for “Barclayfox” on TES. Happy teaching! Barclayfox.
Don’t mention Christmas / xmas. Quiz, bingo, video quiz, music video round, lots of fun !!!
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Don’t mention Christmas / xmas. Quiz, bingo, video quiz, music video round, lots of fun !!!

(4)
On sale at this price for only 1 week, hurry!* Great fun quiz / lesson, complete and ready to use - WITHOUT MENTIONING CHRISTMAS ! Can be used at end of any term or end of year - it is a fantastic fun quiz. Excellent enjoyable lesson were students still learn - so that keeps both SLT and the students happy !! There is nothing for you to do, no need to spend hours carefully planning and resourcing this happy lesson as I’ve spent 12+ hours creating and then updating this for you and my students. Your students will love the following activities: Round 1: Observation - watch a Disney Pixar film trailer and see how much they observed. Round 2: Music - have fun identifying artists and albums and songs. Round 3: Bingo - a great game covering Maths, English, Science, Geography, and History, very enjoyable. Round 4: A to Z alphabet knowledge - covering Maths, English, Science, Geography, and History. 26 questions, use as many as you wish. *** NOTE - THIS IS A DECEMBER FUN RESOURCE THAT DOES NOT TALK ABOUT CHRISTMAS *** All answers are provided and students can peer or self mark. There are over 70 pages/slides - more than enough to keep your students happy for at least 1 full fun lesson! Happy teaching! Barclayfox.
Half life, radioactivity and decay. Half-life graphs, half life maths. Complete lesson.
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Half life, radioactivity and decay. Half-life graphs, half life maths. Complete lesson.

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A complete, and ready to deliver, high quality KS4 / GCSE lesson from Barclayfox, no work required! Can be used by the teacher or for home learning - the Powerpoint easily navigates you thro’ the lesson even if you have not had time to review it before the lesson! Lesson objectives: - Understand what “nuclei” and “radioactivity” and “decay”etc mean. - Explain and understand “half life”. - Use radioactive decay graphs to find half life. - Use maths / numbers to find half life. The lesson contains: Animation (unique). Differentiated activity sheets (HA and MA/LA). Activity sheet answers. Notes to help the teacher. Starter task where students self-assess themselves against each objective. Scientific literacy activities. Homework (capable groups could do this in class). Questions (lots and lots) – all answers are provided. Paired work activities with answers. Gap fills Theory slides (minimal and carefully sculpted – not ‘death by powerpoint’) Video clip links x 2 (carefully selected – this alone can easily save you 20+ minutes). Student self-assessment versus objectives activity – so learners can judge for themselves how much they have learnt BONUS materials: A ppt for students to go on your VLE / shared area. A short version of the master lesson. Don’t waste any more time searching, you’ve found an excellent lesson - buy it now! Thank you for your time, happy teaching. Yours, Barclayfox.
Genes, genetics, alleles and inherited characteristics (dominant and recessive) - complete lesson.
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Genes, genetics, alleles and inherited characteristics (dominant and recessive) - complete lesson.

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A complete and ‘ready to deliver’ lesson on Genes, alleles (dominant and recessive) and inheritance and punnett squares. In other words, how we are made. This is a complete lesson from start to end, you do NOT need to spend hours carefully planning and resourcing this lesson – I have done this for you. :-) There is nothing to do but give it a quick look through and familiarise yourself with it. Lesson objectives: * Describe the difference between dominant and recessive alleles. * Understand how characteristics are inherited. * Learn how to use and then use punnett squares. Activities this lesson contains: Notes to help the teacher. Starter task - tongue types. Literacy. Gap fill. Questions (with answers). Up and about activities. Quiz questions with answers. Think, pair, share. Punnett squares activity. Etc All answers are provided to make things easy for you. As teachers we all work ridiculously long hours each week. Give yourself a break, spend some life with your wife / husband / children / friends / family by purchasing more lessons created by ‘Barclayfox’ once they appear on TES. Please note: when searching for resources please type barclayfox into the search box/engine and it will show all our resources. I hope you will purchase this excellent lesson and please leave positive feedback to keep us working for you creating lessons. This lesson is part of a series, and you may wish to buy others from the series: 0. Bundle – contains all lessons. NOTE: not all series are bundled. 1. Genes and genetics – how we are made 2. Inherited (genetic) diseases 3. Cells, DNA, Chromosomes and Selective breeding 4. Genetic engineering 5. Cloning 6. Biotechnology – bread, beer, cheese and wine. 7. Enzymes and biological detergent. Thank you for your time. Yours, Barclayfox.
Physical quantities and units - complete lesson.
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Physical quantities and units - complete lesson.

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A complete ’ AS / A level Physics lesson on “Physical quantities and units”. Lesson objectives: * Explain that some physical quantities consist of a numerical magnitude and a unit. * Correctly use important units. * Derive units e.g. units of Force, Energy etc Activities this lesson contains: Notes to help the teacher. Starter task - picture puzzle. Literacy / SPaG Questions (with answers) Boggle game Gap fill Quiz questions with answers. Etc All answers are provided to make things easy for you. As science teachers we all work ridiculously long hours each week. Give yourself a break, spend some life with your wife / husband / children / friends / family by purchasing more lessons created by ‘Barclayfox’ once they appear on TES. Please note: when searching for resources please type barclayfox into the search box/engine and it will show you all my resources. I hope you will purchase this excellent lesson and please leave positive feedback. This lesson is part of a series, and you may wish to buy others from the series: 1. Physical quantities and units. 2. Prefixes and making estimates. 3. Scalar and vector quantities, resultants and resolving. 4. More on vectors – resultants and resolving. 5. Definitions in kinematics. 6. DT & VT graphs of motion. 7. Constant acceleration (SUVAT) equations. 8. Free fall. 9. Measurement of g. Thank you for your time. Yours, Barclayfox.
Acids and alkalis and hazard symbols - complete lesson.
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Acids and alkalis and hazard symbols - complete lesson.

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A complete and ready to deliver KS3 lesson on - acids, alkalis and hazard symbols. Students learn / lesson objectives: * What acids and alkalis are * To describe differences between concentrated and dilute solutions of acids. * How to stay safe when using acids * The names and formulae of common acids * To recognise hazard symbols. Activities this lesson contains: Picture puzzle Search for the acid Several gap fills Teacher demo Up and about Think/pair/share Questions etc This lesson is part of a series, and you may wish to buy others from the series: 0. Bundle – contains all four lessons. 1. Acids & alkalis (this lesson - please purchase to find out how to get the others) 2. Indicators 3. Neutralisation 4. Predicting the salt. Thank you for your time. Yours, Barclayfox.
Survival, classification and kingdoms - complete lesson.
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Survival, classification and kingdoms - complete lesson.

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A complete and ready to deliver lesson GCSE/KS4 lesson on survival and classification. This is a complete lesson from start to end, you do NOT need to spend hours carefully planning and resourcing this lesson – I have done this for you. :-) There is nothing to do but give it a quick look through and familiarise yourself with it. Lesson objectives / students learn: * about factors that affect survival in some organisms * how organisms are grouped (classified) into 5 kingdoms * to describe some subgroups of the animal kingdom. * to explain the main characteristics of the 5 kingdoms. * key scientific terminology. Student activities included in the lesson: - differentiated worksheet - card sort (grouping/classifying) - gap fill - matching - think, pair, share activities - questions to answer - quiz - video link All answers are provided to make the lesson easy to use (as are notes to help the teacher). As teachers we all work ridiculously long hours each week. Give yourself a break, spend some life with your wife / husband / children / friends / family by purchasing more lessons created by ‘Barclayfox’ on TES. Please note: when searching for resources please type barclayfox into the search box/engine and it will show you all my resources. I hope you will purchase this excellent lesson and please leave positive feedback. Thank you for your time. Yours, Barclayfox.
Christmas mega pack of activities, and Christmas fun quizzes . Xmas. Best seller!
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Christmas mega pack of activities, and Christmas fun quizzes . Xmas. Best seller!

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On sale at £1.95 for 1 week only! Hurry! Best seller, great fun Christmas Activities, games and Quizzes. Great value, Over 300 slides, pick and choose from 12 interesting, fun and entertaining Christmas rounds: *Maths *English *Christmas itself *Films & Video *Observation *Physics *Geography *Pop music *Sport/PE *Thinking *Biology *Chemistry *Identify the song * Xmas songs. Lots of Christmas cracker Jokes throughout. Very Christmassy from start to finish ! This is ALL you need for ALL your Christmas lessons from ages 8 to 18, buy and relax ! Lots of xmas quiz questions, activities, high quality Christmas images, videos, music, up and about games etc, 300+ fun power point slides (which took approximately 35+ hours of work to create although this was spread over many years as I have happily and successfully used this every Christmas for many years). Fun, enjoyable, entertaining. All answers are provided and different students take turns to run the show, so you can catch up and relax for a change ! Based around Christmas throughout, fun and engaging, you choose which of the 12 rounds you like the best, or use them all with different classes, or better still, let the kids vote for which of the 12 rounds they would like to do!  Great fun for you, great fun for your classes ! Can be used with all abilities and all age groups from 8 to 18 ! Happy Christmas, and most sincere best wishes of the season to you all !!! :-) Happy teaching, Barclayfox. . . . SEARCH WORDS – does this help people who are searching? Holidays, Santa, fun, Christmas assembly, Christmas, Christmas quiz, christmas quizzes, Christmas activities, Noel, advent, Xmas, xmas, Navidad, nativity, Santa Clause, Reindeer, sleigh, snow, snowman, xmas science, Christmas maths, Christmas English, Christmas Geography, Santa clause, Reindeer, Sleigh, snow, snowman, mince pie, turkey, trimmings, Christmas lights, decorations, White Christmas, King’s speech, boxing day, cold meat and pickles, Christmas crackers, Christmas jokes.
Nuclear fission & fusion, chain reactions, controlling CRs, bombs & nuclear power stations.
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Nuclear fission & fusion, chain reactions, controlling CRs, bombs & nuclear power stations.

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A complete, and ready to deliver KS4 lesson There is nothing for you to do but give it a quick look through and familiarise yourself with it. Objectives / students learn to: * Describe what is happening during the fission of uranium-235. * Describe U-235’s fission products. * Explain how a chain reaction works. * Understand how a chain reaction can be controlled. * Understand the different roles of control rods and moderators * Understand the difference between fission and fusion. This lesson majors on fission and chain reactions and their control (and briefly mentions fusion) and it contains the following activities: Starter - picture puzzle to get the students thinking. Starter (more) - game / quiz. SPaG / literacy based on fission. Video links (very carefully chosen and 3 in total). Differentiated work sheets - 3 different levels of difficulty. Gap fills. Animations (2 different animations): A single Fission reaction. Fission chain reactions. Kinaesthetic activity - get your students up and moving about. Gap fill (on a different area of this subject). Plenary quiz game. All answers to all activities are provided. Please note: when searching for resources please type barclayfox into the search box/engine and it will show you all my resources. This lesson is part of a series, whilst they all work very well as standalone individual lessons you may wish to buy others from the series: 0. Bundle – contains all lessons (if available not all series are bundled) 1. History of the atom, discovery of the nucleus, Thompson and Rutherford. 2. Isotopes and Mass number and Atomic number. 3. Alpha, Beta and Gamma – ionising radiation. 4. Changes in the nucleus – decay equations 5. Half life, radioactivity and decay. 6. Activity and half life practicals 7. Dangers and precautions 8. Nuclear radiation in medicine (uses in medicine) 9 -14 Please see this powerpoint for the full list. Thank you, and happy teaching! Yours, Barclayfox.