Twenty First Century Science

21st Century Science

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Coursework for GCSE Science

Guidance for your students

Internal assessment counts for 33.3% of your final grade. The Case study is 20% and Data Analysis 13.3%.

Case study (20%)

Choosing a topic

Choose a topic from one of these categories:
A question where scientific knowledge is not certain (such as ‘Does a mobile phone cause brain damage?’ ‘Is there life in other parts of the Universe?’)
A question about decision-making using scientific information (such as ‘Should the Government stop research into human cloning?’)
A question about a personal issue involving science (such as ‘Should my child have the MMR vaccine?’)

Selecting information

Collect information from different places: books, the internet, newspapers – look for different views on the topic.
Say where each piece of information came from. Make it clear if you have quoted or copied something.
Choose only information that is relevant to the question you are studying.
Say why you chose these sources and how you decided whether they are reliable.

Understanding the question

Use scientific knowledge and understanding to explain the topic you are studying.
When you report what other people have said, say what scientific evidence they had (from experiments, surveys etc).

Making your own conclusion

Compare the evidence and points of view.
Consider the risks of different courses of action.
Say what you think should be done, and link this to the evidence you have reported.

Present your study

Make sure your report is laid out clearly in a sensible order.
Use pictures, tables, charts, graphs etc to present information.
Take care with your spelling, grammar, punctuation, and use scientific terms where they are appropriate.

Creating a Case Study

Where do I start? Sources of information could include:
internet
school library
you science textbooks and notes
local public library
TV
radio
newspapers and magazines
museums and exhibitions

Data Analysis (13.3%)

Interpreting Data

Use tables, charts, graphs or calculations to show any patterns in your results.
Say what conclusions you can make from your data.
Explain your conclusions using your science knowledge and understanding.

Evaluation

Think whether any improvements in your apparatus or method could give more precise and accurate results.
Check how closely each result fits the general pattern and look for any outliers.
Suggest some improvements or extra data you could collect to be more confident in your conclusions.

Tip

Keep detailed notes of each stage of your planning and work. Check each result as you get it to see that it fits in with others you already have. If not, consider whether you need to repeat it to check.

Download

>>Download the same guidance on an A4 mini-poster GCSE Science coursework (0.8 MB).

Teachers may request an A2 size copy of this same poster in exchange for their school name and address. Email
Sarah Taylor at OUP sarah.taylor@oup.com