
At Le Rondin School, we believe that Science learning is fundamental to exploring, understanding and interacting with the natural and made worlds in which we live. It offers a wealth of experiences and ideas that encourage children’s natural curiosity and creativity, inspiring awe and wonder. Science supports the development of technology that leads to new scientific discoveries, shaping how we live safe and healthy lives in our rapidly changing society. It helps children to find new ways of looking at the world and to engage with changing explanations about how the world works.
Through the teaching of science, children develop knowledge and skills, linking concepts together and applying prior understanding to new learning and situations. They learn about science as a subject discipline and the importance of scientists on our everyday lives and the world around us. Children learn to value ideas and to see talking, thinking and imagining as essential elements in developing understanding and new processes. They tackle problems, forming questions, generating and testing ideas and designs, and deciding how to seek solutions. They gather and make sense of evidence, test out hypotheses and evaluate processes and outcomes. They learn the possibilities of science, inspiring them to become the scientists, engineers, designers and innovators of the future and how to be informed citizens responsive to the needs of others and the world in which they live.
Curriculum
The Bailiwick of Guernsey Big Picture Curriculum and Key Entitlements documents provide a structure and skill development for the Science curriculum being taught in Years 1 - 6. Our science curriculum is developed by amalgamating hiqh quality learning units from the Bailiwick and beyond, including Oak Academy, Chris Quigley’s Curriculum, PLAN Assessment and others. Units are designed to develop concepts over 2 years with the first year at a basic level and the second year at an advancing and deeper level. The science curriculum includes ‘notable’ scientists. Learning about these scientists may be in individual standalone lessons or woven in as part of the topic teaching. In addition to the science teaching throughout the year, there is also an annual Science Week which usually coincides with The Great Science Share. Throughout this week classes select a scientist and/or theory to explore in depth and their work is shared with the rest of the school and parents in the form of a Science Fair.
Timetabling
In the Early Years Foundation Stage, Science is taught through specific rich learning tasks and when learning through play, either in continuous provision or in enhanced provision. The children are given a wealth of opportunities to find out about the world around them and to explore the properties of objects, how things work, and cause and effect. Many of the opportunities the children have to investigate materials or living things are planned as enhancements to the indoor and outdoor learning environments. These include opportunities for sensory learning experiences - feeling, smelling, tasting, looking at and listening to things. Science is timetabled to be taught weekly in years 1 - 6.
Subject Pedagogy
Teaching science can be difficult. Learning science can be difficult. Concepts may be abstract and confusing. Concepts build upon each other and multiple concepts can be in thought at any one time. As such, it is important to consider research into specific science learning. Some key cognitive principles taken from the Deans for Impact report (2015):
Teaching science at Le Rondin requires staff to consider the Essential Characteristics of Scientists (Chris Quigley, 2018):
Planning
The Long Term Plan for science is part of the whole school Le Rondin Curriculum document.
Learning sequences for each unit are written collaboratively by the Key stage Leader and Science Subject Leader as medium term plans (MTPs). Class teachers adjust these medium term plans to ensure that they meet the needs of their current cohort.
Teachers either create their own short term planning for their own use or add to the medium term plan documents, adding in the detail that is needed to teach each lesson. The depth of this will depend on each teacher.
Teaching
Science teaching balances teacher presentation, teacher demonstration, guided pupil experiments, and pupils investigating to ensure the best learning possible. A range of approaches should be evident within each topic area.
Our Science teaching offers opportunities for children to:
Assessment
As in all subjects, teachers use a range of assessment strategies in their everyday work. These are both formative and summative. Formative assessment is used as the main tool for assessing the impact of Science as it allows for misconceptions and gaps to be addressed more immediately rather than building on insecure scientific foundations.
Assessment is teacher based and formed using formal strategies (e.g. assessment tasks, quizzes) and informal strategies (e.g. concept maps, verbal/written outcomes, reflection tasks/presentations). Assessment should focus on the pupil's ability to draw upon their knowledge and to explain what they know, why something is what it is, or why something happens in a certain way. It is about a pupil’s ability to explain and to apply their knowledge rather than an instant recall of facts.
Assessment also focuses on the pupil’s ability to think scientifically, to test a hypothesis and to draw conclusions.
Our successful approach to the teaching of science will result in a fun, engaging, high quality science education that provides our pupils with the knowledge and skills for understanding the world.
Our pupils will: