Primary school science, at its best, encourages children to be aware of the world around them, and to ask questions. It helps them to understand the concepts of fair testing and control experiments, to observe patterns, and to be prepared for more formal scientific enquiry and investigation in later years.
Unfortunately, in a classroom environment it is very difficult to teach in a way which is inspiring to thirty or more children, and particularly so with science. What is ‘obvious’ to one child may be new and exciting to another of the same age. If a child has played with simple electronic circuits at home, the building of a buzzer in school is going to seem like rather a waste of an afternoon, whereas to another child it may be the highlight of the term.
Home educated children benefit from individualised science
So science is an area where home educated children benefit,no matter what their interest and ability. You can choose books to suit their interests, and work together on the topics which inspire and excite them. Moreover they can have ‘hands on’ the whole time without having to share the stop-watch or the candle-lighting with the rest of a group!
An
excellent general science book for the primary years is Judith
Hann’s How
Science Works. This
contains
fascinating background to scientific discovery of interest to adults
and older children, combined with simple and vivid explanations of how
thigns work, and dozens of experiments and demonstrations which can be
done in the home. Not always in print, but well worth buying
second hand, if you can.
An
excellent way of learning some scientific principles is to encourage
your child to help with cooking from an early age. Seeing how food
changes consistency when it is cooked, or when combined with other
foods is likely to inspire several more questions, and a book which
several home educators have recommended is Science
Experiments You Can Eat by Vicki
Cobb.
Science CD-Roms for your computer
Dorling
Kindersley publish
some excellent
CD Rom science guides: The
(new) Way Things Work gives a
guided
tour to a vast array of machines and inventions, with sections about
the people who invented them. It is understandable by
fairly young children but contains sufficient information to interest
much older children and adults as well!
The
DK Eyewitness
Encyclopedia Of Science 2.0 software
contains an overview of many scientific principes,
focussing on the three main branches of science as well as maths, with
some good explanations of sometimes complex topics. This is
appropriate for older primary school children and also into the
secondary years.
The Ultimate Human Body
is a
fascinating
guide for people of all ages who want to know more about human biology;
the CD allows a view of the skeleton, or the muscles, or the internal
organs and shows clearly how the body works, with accurate descriptions
and terms. (Do check that your computer has the correct
requirements before purchasing any of these, of course).
There
is plenty
of other science
software relevant to
children of about six or seven and upwards - it's worth browsing your
local bookshops or computer shops, and perhaps asking for a
demonstration, to see what is suitable. Some will be more
'schooly' than others, designed primarily to get children through
tests. But the better-written software should be interesting
and inspiring.
There are also a wide-ranging selection of science books for children from Usborne. With clear text and age-appropriate pictures, they're a mine of useful information and highly recommended. If you want to use workbooks, you will probably find a wide variety in your local bookshops.
There are a vast number of useful web-sites covering science topics for younger children. Many have interactive activities to help reinforce understanding of complex ideas - there are some suggestions on my science resources page.


