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Science

At Weston Rhyn Primary School, we want our children to be naturally curious about the world around them.  We want to embrace their sense of wonder about natural phenomena and to guide them into becoming enquiry-based learners.  Science in our school is about developing children’s ideas and ways of working that enable them to make sense of the world in which they live.  

Scientific enquiry skills are embedded in each topic the children study and these topics are revisited and developed throughout their time at school.  Topics, such as Plants, are taught in Key Stage One and studied again in further detail throughout Key Stage Two. This allows our children to grow in their understanding, building upon their prior knowledge and increasing their enthusiasm for the topics whilst embedding this procedural knowledge into the long-term memory. 

Science teaching at Weston Rhyn involves adapting and extending the curriculum to match all pupils’ needs to ensure they are challenged and achieve success, regardless of their starting point.   Science is taught as discrete units and lessons where needed to ensure coverage in line with the National Curriculum requirements.  Opportunities are sought to teach science through all of the primary subjects.

We ensure that all children are provided with rich learning experiences that aim to:

  • Prepare our children for life in an increasingly scientific and technological world today and in the future. 
  • Help our children acquire a growing understanding of the nature, processes and methods of scientific ideas. 
  • Help develop and extend our children’s scientific concept of their world. 
  • Build on our children’s natural curiosity and developing a scientific approach to problems. 
  • Encouraging open-mindedness, self-assessment, perseverance and developing the skills of investigation – including: observing, measuring, predicting, hypothesising, experimenting, communicating, interpreting, explaining and evaluating. 
  • Develop the use of scientific language, recording and techniques. 
  • Develop the use of computing in investigating and recording. 
  • Make links between science and other subjects.