Science
"Great are the works of the Lord; they are pondered by all who delight in them."
Psalm 111:2
Intent
Our vision for our Science curriculum at Rothley is to stimulate and excite pupils` curiosity about the world around them which will support their critical and creative thought. This vision will support the cultural significance and contribution that Science makes on our lives. As we follow the thoroughly planned and sequenced CUSP Science curriculum, scientific enquiry will be at the heart of the children’s learning and vocabulary will be built on through our spiral curriculum as the children move up through school.
As stated on the CUSP website, the curriculum is sequenced in a way that draws upon prior learning and the opportunities for revisiting prior work is at the heart of all learning. The children will become familiar with ‘substantive knowledge’ which is the subject knowledge and explicit vocabulary used to learn about the content. A detailed and connected knowledge base is constructed which allows pupils to use this alongside their prior learning.
Alongside this, children will use disciplinary knowledge – ‘knowing how to collect, use, interpret, understand and evaluate the evidence from scientific processes.’ This ultimately allows them to become ‘more expert’ after each unit of study.
The substantive concepts which are woven throughout the Science curriculum allow children to develop their working scientifically skills through numerous opportunities to discuss and question the principles in Science. They do this through testing hypothesis and conducting experiments which challenge them to think scientifically.
In the CUSP Science curriculum this scientific analysis is separated into these sections:
• identifying and classifying
• pattern seeking
• research
• observing over time
• fair and comparative testing
Through high-quality teaching, the children will be able to discuss and challenge any misconceptions and the cumulative curriculum supports the retention of knowledge which is drawn upon as the children progress through school.
Implementation
EYFS
In EYFS, the study of Science is focussed around three early learning goals: Communication and Language, Personal, Social and Emotional Development and Understanding the World. At Rothley, the children will have opportunities to explore the natural world around them and make observations of animals and plants. They will be able to identify similarities and differences between the natural world and contrasting environments and know about changes to the natural world, such as the seasons and changing states of matter through play and exploration.
KS1
An overview of the CUSP units of Science taught in KS1 in Biology, Chemistry and Physics.
|
Autumn |
Spring |
Summer |
Year 1 |
Seasonal changes and daily weather
Introduce Plants – (trees)
Animals, including humans |
Everyday materials
Revisit 1: Animals, including humans |
Plants
Revisit 2: Plants, Animals including humans |
Year 2 |
Living things and their habitats
Animals, including humans |
Uses of everyday materials
Revisit Living things/ materials |
Plants
Revisit Living things and their habitats / Animals, including humans |
KEY STAGE 1 – CUSP Curriculum narrative
Pupils study the Seasons and develop an early conceptual understanding of how day becomes night. An understanding of change over time connects to the study of Plants, including trees. This focus enables children to associate trees as belonging to the plant kingdom and notice the changes deciduous trees go through connected to the seasons.
Contrasting that study, pupils learn about Animals, including humans. Non-examples of plants are used to contrast the features of an animal.
Pupils are introduced to identifying and classifying materials. Scientific terms, such as transparent, translucent and opaque are taught explicitly through vocabulary instruction and pupils make further sense by applying it to what they know and then to working and thinking scientifically tasks. This substantive knowledge is enriched by pupils’ use of disciplinary knowledge through scientific enquiry.
To sophisticate their understanding, Year 1 pupils revisit the study Animals, including humans as a retrieval module and deepen their knowledge through revisiting and thinking hard through increasingly challenging tasks.
As pupils progress through KS1, new knowledge is integrated with pre-existing understanding. For example, in Year 2, the study of Living things and their habitats and Uses of everyday materials, engages pupils to integrate and draw upon their knowledge of Animals, including humans as well as Plants, and the study of Materials. New substantive knowledge is constructed and made sense of through Working and Thinking scientifically tasks.
KS2
An overview of the CUSP units of Science taught in KS2 in Biology, Chemistry and Physics.
|
Autumn |
Spring |
Summer |
Year 3 |
Rocks
Animals, including humans
Revisit Rocks |
Forces and magnets
Plants |
Plants continued
Light |
Year 4 |
Living things and their habitats
States of matter |
Animals, including humans |
Electricity
Sound |
Year 5 |
Properties and changes of materials
Animals, including humans |
Forces (Gravity and Galileo)
Earth in space |
Living things and their habitats
Forces continued |
Year 6 |
Electricity
Animals including humans (circulatory system) |
Animals including humans (water transport)
Light |
Living things and their habitats
Evolution and inheritance |
LOWER KEY STAGE 2 - CUSP Curriculum narrative
The unit on Rocks is studied and connected with prior knowledge from ‘Everyday materials’ in KS1. A study of Animals, including humans is built upon from KS1 and contrasts the physical features with the functions they perform, including the skeleton and muscles. Rocks is revisited again to sophisticate and deepen pupils’ knowledge, advancing their understanding.
Forces and magnets are introduced and connect with KS1 materials, including twisting, bending and squashing. Contact and non-contact forces are taught and understanding applied through Working and Thinking Scientifically. The abstract concept of Light is made concrete through knowing about light sources and shadows. Plants are studied to develop a more sophisticated understanding of their parts and functions, including pollination.
A study of Living things and their habitats pays close attention to classification and is directly taught using prior knowledge to ensure conceptual frameworks are secure. Explicit vocabulary instruction supports pupils to deconstruct words for their component meaning, for example invertebrate. Animals, plants and environments are connected in this study with a summary focusing on positive and negative change.
Electricity is introduced. Substantive knowledge is taught so that pupils acquire understanding about electrical sources, safety and components of a single loop circuit. Practical tasks give pupils the opportunity to think using disciplinary knowledge in the context of variables. Pupils make sense of what they know by testing, proving and disproving hypotheses.
Animals, including humans focuses on the sequence of digestion, from the mouth to excretion. Misconceptions, such as digestion begins in the stomach, are pre-empted, limited and represented as non-examples.
States of matter and Sound are taught using knowledge of the particle theory. Acquiring substantive knowledge about ‘states’ of matter supports pupils to understand how solids, liquids and gases behave. This knowledge is connected further to geographical studies of the Water cycle and life processes. Practical scientific tasks and tests help pupils build a coherent understanding of the particle theory by applying what they know through structured scientific enquiry. Misconceptions, such as ‘liquid particles are slightly more separated than gas and less compacted than solids’ are addressed.
UPPER KEY STAGE 2 - CUSP Curriculum narrative
In the study of Properties and changes of materials, it is important that pupils reuse and draw upon their understanding of states of matter. This prior content eases the load on the working memory to process and make sense of new knowledge, including solutions, mixtures, reversible and irreversible changes.
Change is also studied within Animals, including humans, focusing on growth and development of humans and animals.
Earth in Space develops the conceptual understanding of our place in the universe. This study unwraps misconceptions, including the Moon changing shape, the Sun moving across the sky and how seasons occur.
A study of Forces sophisticates the substantive knowledge acquired in KS1 and LKS2. New content, including air resistance and water resistance is studied. Force multipliers, such as levers are studied to understand how we can be efficient with effort. For example, a spanner with a long handle multiplies the force and makes it easier to turn a bolt than spanner with a shorter handle. Simple machines, such as pulleys are also studied as force multipliers – they move the load through a greater distance with the same energy being used. Enhancing this study of Forces, pupils learn about Galileo Galilei 1564 - 1642 (considered the father of modern science).
Living things and their habitats focuses on differences in life cycles of living things and how they reproduce. This study also contrasts previous scientific thinking. Pupils contrast how people in the past thought and constructed understanding, in the absence of scientific evidence, to explain things they didn’t understand. Maria Merion is the significant scientist studied, she observed closely and carefully drew insects undergoing biochemical metamorphosis. David Attenborough describes Maria Merion as one of the most important contributors to the field of entomology. A further study enables pupils in UKS2 to revisit and add to their understanding of classification through the taxonomy created by Carl Linnaeus. More complex animals are studied, including invertebrates such as Myriapods and Echinodermata (starfish and Sea urchins) as well as Arthropods such as Crustacea, Arachnids, and Insects.
Light is revisited and taught with advanced substantive knowledge. This is physics study with a focus on the properties of light, not the biology of the eye.
The study of Animals, including humans enables pupils to add new knowledge to their mental models of biological systems. Circulation, the components of blood and the mechanism of the heart is connected to healthy living through diet and exercise. Many of these science studies are enriched and conceptual frameworks extended through the deliberate curriculum choice to study charts and graphs in Maths, food in Design Technology or reuse and retrieve substantive knowledge in other contexts, such as in writing.
Electricity is enhanced with an advanced study of electrical circuits. New substantive knowledge is acquired in the context of the particle theory, which was previously studied. Working and Thinking scientifically tasks help to deepen and make sense of new learning, such as the concept of electricity and the way we explain it using terms such as charge, potential difference and flow.
Evolution and inheritance introduces two significant scientists - Charles Darwin and Alfred Wallace as pioneers of scientific thinking in the field of evolution. This study draws on how misconceptions may have been arrived at to explain the past and how theories explain significant change, over time. Substantive concepts, including adaption and variation are taught explicitly through vocabulary and clarity is achieved through worked examples. This supports pupils to use this substantive knowledge in a disciplinary way.
In CUSP Science, substantive knowledge is always present and acts as a precursor for pupils’ understanding. This will enable them to successfully apply disciplinary knowledge.
In KS2 CUSP Science, we have defined these terms:
• variable - the things that can change in a science experiment.
• independent variable - the variable that is changed by the scientist.
• dependent variables - are the things that the scientist watches closely for to see how they respond to the change made to the independent variable.
• control variables - the things that a scientist wants to remain the same and not change so they can see how the independent variable reacts.
Impact
Through the implementation of the carefully designed curriculum which will be adapted to ensure each child has access to learning and the potential to excel at Rothley, we will ensure that our children leave primary school as developing scientists with the confidence to challenge and investigate scientific enquiries and ultimately spark a desire to continue their discovery of our world.