Where Cambridge Lower Secondary physics really starts and stops
Last Monday, straight after lunch, my Year 8 set were deep in Stage 8 Forces. A gorgeous rocket video had them buzzing, but when I asked for the resultant on a toy car (6 N right, 2 N left), half wrote “net = 8 N.” The clip was on-topic, but not curriculum-fit. That’s the line I watch with Cambridge Lower Secondary: resources need our vocabulary (resultant, extension, terminal velocity comes later), our SI conventions, and an enquiry structure students can mirror in their books.
The pitfalls are familiar. US-flavoured sheets push “net force” and pounds. Generic KS3 packs skip risk assessment or treat variables casually. Some “investigations” are really demos, with no space for tabulating data or drawing tidy force arrows. I keep a running shortlist inside ClassPods so I can reuse what lands, but when I’m scouting for science ideas that I can adapt quickly, I start by browsing the community science picks here. If the resource helps students talk like Cambridge and write like Cambridge, it earns a page in the book.