Year 8 Science

Brief summary of the syllabus

The Science Course closely reflects the statutory guidelines of the National Curriculum. It provides a firm foundation for Science at GCSE, a stimulating introduction to a broad range of scientific knowledge, opportunities to develop a number of practical skills, including the designing and carrying out of investigations which involve making hypotheses and observations, the correct use of apparatus, problem solving and the communication of ideas. It is based on the 2001 QCA scheme of work, written in-house but using Heinemann Science Scheme, textbooks of which are intended to act as a valuable resource for study and revision.

Boys at Queen Elizabeth's have two double lessons of Science each week in Year 8. Homework is set each week; it may consist of the completion of the accounts of practical work, a piece of independent research, diagrams or questions based on class work or questions and related work from the textbook. Science homework for the week should take between 45 and 60 minutes.

ModuleTopic
1Digestion and Respiration
2Atoms, Elements and Compounds
3Sound and Light
4Heat and Magnetism
5Microbes, Disease and Ecological Relationships
6Rocks and the Rock Cycle
 

What skills and attributes are being developed and tested?

Pupils build on their scientific knowledge and understanding and make connections between different areas of science. They use scientific ideas and models to explain a range of events and understand applications of science. They think about the impact of science on the environment and other contexts. They take account of other views. They quantitative practical work, which they evaluate. They select information from different sources and learn how scientists work.

What can parents expect to see in classwork and homework?

Both classwork and homework will display a wide range of work, from simple learning of facts, to their application in novel situations. The science course is also designed to develop key thinking skills, such as creative writing and information processing: examples of this work will be used as homework to re-enforce the learning which has taken place in lessons.

What can parents do in this subject at this stage?

Parents can encourage good work habits, such as the completion of homework when it is set, and forward planning.

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Final examination

The final exam is taken soon after the summer half term and will test all the topics covered up to that point. It will be used for the re-setting of pupils into Year 8.

Tests and setting

  • There are six topics, each lasting approximately half a term.
  • The topics are taught in rotation across the sets (for reasons of availability of resources) and each is tested with a National Curriculum based test at the end of each topic.
  • There is a progress test at Easter half term, and small changes in sets may be made at this point.
  • There is also an end of year exam, which examines all the work that they have completed up to this point.
  • Re-setting for Year 9 is made on the basis of the results from all six topic tests and the end of year exam together. More weight is given to the end of year exam than to any one individual topic test.
  • In borderline cases, professional judgement based on marks for homework and class work will be used.

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Revision

Key to success in science is the learning of essential scientific knowledge and understanding, without which further more abstract work cannot progress. Therefore revision should in the first instance, concentrate on these foundations. Self testing and the production of some form of revision notes is one way of ensuring that this process happens.

Pupil target setting

Feedback from all tests ensures that all pupils know at what level they are achieving. After each test, every pupil completes a section in their pupil progress file, as well as setting themselves appropriate targets for improvement.

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Upper Band Level Descriptors

The Qualifications and Curriculum Authority (QCA) expects that the majority of pupils nationally will attain somewhere between levels 2 and 5 at Key stage 2 and between levels 3 and 7 at Key stage 3. At Queen Elizabeth Boys' School we expect pupils to be entering with Science levels at 4, 5 or even 6. By the Key Stage 3 examinations, we would naturally expect attainment to be at level 6 or above.

To fully communicate what pupils are expected to know would require the reprinting of the National Curriculum document itself. Interested parents are advised to obtain this document from the QCA themselves. The descriptors for each attainment target are the same as those in year 7, although clearly applied to different scientific topic areas in the modules described above.

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News

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21/10/2008 - Secondary School of the Year

Queen Elizabeth’s School has been named The Sunday Times State Secondary School of the Year 2007. The School was featured in 'Parent Power' in The Sunday Times on 18 November 2007. 

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21/08/2008 - Excellent GCSE results for QE

Boys, parents and staff are celebrating following the publication of this year’s GCSE results. 96% of all GCSE examinations taken by boys at Queen Elizabeth’s were graded A*, A or B, with 83.1% achieving the top two grades. An impressive 138 boys in the cohort secured an A* in mathematics.

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14/08/2008 - Outstanding 2008 A-Level results

83.2% of all A-Levels taken at Queen Elizabeth's have been graded A, confirming the School's position as one of the top boys' schools in the country. Thirty-seven QE boys will now take up places at Oxford and Cambridge in the Autumn, representing a new record for the School.

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