This revision guide provides in-depth coverage of all the externally assessed course content for GCSE OCR B Additional Science. This book can be used to support study throughout the course and as a revision aid in the build up to exams. * In-depth coverage provides everything required for thorough exam preparation * Detailed explanations and diagrams help consolidate and build on knowledge throughout the course * Clear design and direct references to the specification provide structured revision and maximum assurance. This revision guide provides in-depth coverage of all the externally assessed course content for GCSE OCR B Additional Science. This book can be used to support study throughout the course and as a revision aid in the build up to exams. * In-depth coverage provides everything required for thorough exam preparation * Detailed explanations and diagrams help consolidate and build on knowledge throughout the course * Clear design and direct references to the specification provide structured revision and maximum assurance.
Serving as a suite of complementary specifications, this title offers options for science at GCSE. Its specifications and resources are the products of collaboration between the University of York Science Education Group, the Nuffield Curriculum Centre, OCR, and Oxford University Press.
Exam Board: OCR Level: A-level Subject: Chemistry First Teaching: September 2015 First Exam: June 2017 This is an OCR endorsed resource Stretch and challenge your students' knowledge and understanding of Chemistry, build their mathematical and practical skills, and provide plenty of assessment guidance with this OCR Year 2 Student Book. - Build understanding with a summary of prior knowledge and diagnostic questions at the start of each chapter to help bring students up to speed - Support practical assessment with Practical Skill summaries that help develop your students' knowledge and skills - Test understanding and provide plenty of practice to assess progression, with Test Yourself Questions and multiple choice questions - Provide mathematical support with examples of method integrated throughout and a dedicated 'Maths in Chemistry' chapter - Develop understanding with free online access to Test yourself Answers, an Extended Glossary, Learning Outcomes and Topic Summaries
Packed full of GCSE-style questions to test understanding, this OCR Gateway Science exam practice workbook is designed to help familiarise students with the types of questions that they may come across in the exam. Feel confident with thorough exam preparation for GCSE OCR Gateway Science. Including different question formats, this exam practice workbook allows you to revise in a way that suits you best and improve your performance in the exam. Included in this book: * a variety of question formats as used by OCR to give students the best possible practice prior to tests and exams * lots of quick tests to check understanding * relevant formulae and data sheets * clear and concise coverage of the exam assessed content * simple and engaging explanations * highlighted key words, plus a supporting glossary to build vocabulary
These new Twenty First Century Science resources have been written alongside the 2016 specifications. Students of all abilities are supported with separate Higher and Foundation books, and maths and practical skills are developed throughout. An assessment item for every assessable learning outcome provides evidence of students' progress.
First published in 1924, 'Which School?' brings together in one volume a wide range of information and advice, updated annually, on independent education for children up to the age of 18 years.
There are two key questions at the heart of the ongoing debate about education and training for all young people, irrespective of background, ability or attainment: What counts as an educated 19 year old today? Are the models of education we have inherited from the past sufficient to meet the needs of all young people, as well as the social and economic needs of the wider community? Education for All addresses these questions in the light of evidence collected over five years by the Nuffield Review of 14-19 Education and Training: the most rigorous investigation of every aspect of this key educational phase for decades. Written by the co-directors of the Nuffield Review, Education for All provides a critical, comprehensive and thoroughly readable overview of 14-19 education and training and makes suggestions for the kind of education and training that should be provided over the coming decade and beyond. The authors acknowledge that much has been achieved by the respective governments – massive investment in resources; closer collaboration between schools, colleges, training providers, voluntary agencies and employers; recognition and promotion of a wider range of qualifications. They are also optimistic about the good things that are going on in many secondary classrooms – enormous amounts of creativity; courageous efforts to meet problems; a deep concern and caring for many young people otherwise deprived of hope and opportunity. But they argue for a radical reshaping of the future in the light of a broader vision of education – a greater respect for more practical and active learning; a system of assessment which supports rather than impoverishes learning; respect for the professional expertise of the teacher; a more unified system of qualifications ensuring progression into higher education and employment; the creation of strongly collaborative and local learning systems; and a more reflective and participative approach to policy. Education for All should be read by everyone working in – or with an interest in – secondary-level education in England and Wales and beyond.
Assessment is a fundamental issue in research in science education, in curriculum development and implementation in science education as well as in science teaching and learning. This book takes a broad and deep view of research involving assessment in science education, across contexts and cultures (from whole countries to individual classrooms) and across forms and purposes (from assessment in the service of student learning to policy implications of system wide assessment). It examines the relationships between assessment, measurement and evaluation; explores assessment philosophies and practices in relation to curriculum and scientific literacy/learning; and details the relationships between assessment and science education policy. The third in a series, Valuing Assessment in Science Education has chapters from a range of international scholars from across the globe and staff from Monash University, King’s College London and University of Waikato. The two previous books in the series examined research relevant to the re-emergence of values in science education and teaching across the spectrum of science education as well as across cultural contexts through the professional knowledge of science teaching. This third book now moves to examine different aspects of generating understanding about what science is learnt, how it is learnt, and how it is valued. Valuing Assessment in Science Education will appeal to all those with some engagement with and/or use of research in science education, including research students, academics, curriculum development agencies, assessment authorities, and policy makers. It will also be of interest to all classroom science teachers who seek to keep abreast of the latest research and development and thinking in their area of professional concern.