Book Log
Everything you need to create your own A5 book log.
Everything you need to create your own A5 book log.
When new parents ask about HE and exams, they think the worst part is getting started on the GCSE ladder, little do they know that, for so many of us, it is the getting your child to the exam centre that leaves you with sleepless nights and cold sweats. When […]
These cards were compiled to help with revision for the CAIE 0987 economics IGCSE, and follow the Susan Grant Cambridge IGCSE Economics Coursebook.
List of links compiled for the CAIE Sociology IGCSE, June 2019 sitting. Later articles have been added, but may well have to be updated for future sittings and syllabi.
These cards have been put together to help support learning for the CAIE IGCSE economics exam, but economics being what it is, they will also support all other IGCSE and GCSE economics syllabuses.
These cards have been put together to help support learning for the CAIE IGCSE economics exam, but economics being what it is, they will also support all other IGCSE and GCSE economics syllabuses.
Written for a KS3 English group, but can easily be adapted for older students and aspects used for younger children. Minus the final activity, it can be used as a stand-alone session, looking at the opening line of stories, but is also the second part of three 1.5 hr sessions.
These cards have been put together to help support learning for the CAIE IGCSE economics exam, but economics being what it is, they will also support all other IGCSE and GCSE economics syllabuses.
This session was created in 2016 for a business studies GCSE group. It was designed to cover content for the CAIE IGCSE Business Studies (0450) syllabus, but is also relevant for all other IGCSE and GCSE business studies courses. There is also cross over with IGCSE/GCSE economics.
This mini-booklet was created for a pre-GCSE geography group, but there is much overlap with the GCSE syllabuses. It looks at composition of the Earth, how rocks are formed, continental drift, plate tectonics, plate boundaries, and the 2004 Boxing Day tsunami case study.