Primary Science Skills and How to Teach Them: Getting to grips with scientific enquiry

£5.99

Primary Science Skills and How to Teach Them: Getting to grips with scientific enquiry has been highly anticipated and the first 2 units are now available for purchase. These are currently digtal only resources and sold as PDFs.

ASE Members and PSTT Fellows can access the Primary Science Skills resources for free on the ASE website.

Check out our SAMPLE PACK to get a tast of what’s on offer. 

You can purchase the first 2 units for £5.99 each, or both for £9.99.

You can join our email list to find out when next units in the series are released.

Scientific enquiry is essentially a thinking process. For children to undertake effective science enquiries in the classroom, they need to know how to collect useful data and how to interpret them. Simply meeting science skills during practical activities is rarely enough for them to be learned and embedded.

Primary Science Skills and How to Teach Them has been developed for children aged 7–11. It is based on two books written by Anne Goldsworthy, Rod Watson and Valerie Wood-Robinson. Originally created for children aged 9-13, Getting to Grips with Graphs (1999) and Developing Understanding (2000) were the outcomes of the AKSIS project: a three-year research collaboration between the ASE and King’s College London, funded by the Wellcome Trust.

Building on the more open-ended, exploratory approach of lower primary, Primary Science Skills and How to Teach Them provides teachers with simple strategies and short activities to support upper primary children (aged 7-11) to develop a range of disciplinary knowledge and skills, which can subsequently be applied in their own scientific investigations.

The materials cover the skills required at each stage of a scientific enquiry and are mapped to different scientific enquiry types, providing teachers with a comprehensive choice of activities.

The resources will extend over 8 units and the first 4 are available now.

Unit 1: Encouraging Exploration – Before planning the detail of a scientific enquiry, children need to focus on the context of the enquiry. Unit 1 is 43 pages.

Unit 2: From Questions to Enquiry – Children need to know about some of the main ways of collecting evidence so that, when faced with a variety of questions, they can suggest an appropriate approach. Unit 2 is 29 pages.

Unit 3: Planning and Predicting – Pupils who can describe the enquiry that they are tackling with clarity tend to make good planning decisions. The modules in this unit are designed to help children develop these characteristics.

Unit 4: Gathering Useful Evidence – The most important part of any scientific enquiry is the quality of the data collected. This unit helps children take sensible planning decisions to ensure that the quality of data produced is as high as possible.

Unit 5: Collecting and Recording Results – Coming soon…

Unit 6: Presenting Results – Coming soon…

Unit 7: Describing and Explaining Results – Coming soon…

Unit 8: Evaluating Investigations – Coming soon…

If you like to gain free access to all 8 units when they are published, why not check out becoming an ASE member HERE.

Format: PDF DownloadAge Range: 7 – 11 years
Series Author: Tracy TyrrellContributing Authors: Anne Goldsworthy & Ali Eley

Additional information

Subject

New, Primary

Format

Digital/PDF Download

Age Range

5-11

Publisher

The Association for Science Education/ Primary Science Teaching Trust

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