When a Practical Demonstration Is Better Than Another Worksheet
Why real experiments still matter in science teaching—and how Philip M Russell Ltd makes the difference
Worksheets have an important place in science education. They help students practise calculations, review terminology and become familiar with examination questions.
But there are moments when another worksheet is not what a student needs.
A student may be able to repeat the definition of resonance without understanding why a guitar body makes a string sound louder. They may know the formula for resistance but still be uncertain about what voltage and current are actually doing in a circuit. They may have memorised the stages of osmosis without being able to visualise water moving through a partially permeable membrane.
At those moments, a real demonstration can make the difference.
Science is not simply a collection of facts printed in a textbook. It is a practical way of investigating the world. Students need opportunities to observe, measure, question, predict and sometimes be surprised.
That is why practical science remains central to the teaching offered by Philip M Russell Ltd.
The Problem with Worksheet-Only Learning
A worksheet can tell a student that increasing the force on an object produces a greater acceleration.
A practical demonstration allows them to see the object move, measure its acceleration, change the force and discover whether the evidence supports the theory.
The difference is significant.
When students complete too many exercises without seeing the science behind them, learning can become mechanical. They search for the correct formula, insert the numbers and hope that the answer matches the mark scheme.
They may obtain the correct answer without developing a secure understanding.
This often becomes apparent when the question is presented in an unfamiliar form. The student remembers the procedure used on the worksheet but cannot transfer the idea to a new situation.
Practical work helps build the missing connection between the words, the mathematics and the physical event.
Seeing the Science Changes the Conversation
One of the most valuable features of a practical demonstration is that it gives the student something real to discuss.
Instead of asking:
“Can you remember the definition?”
we can ask:
“What did you notice?”
“Why do you think that happened?”
“What would happen if we changed this variable?”
“Does the evidence agree with your prediction?”
Those questions move the lesson away from simple recall and towards scientific reasoning.
A student who watches an experiment becomes an observer. A student who helps operate it becomes an investigator. A student who explains the result begins to think like a scientist.
That is a much more powerful learning experience than filling in another line of missing words.
Physics Becomes Easier When It Moves
Physics can appear highly mathematical, particularly at GCSE and A level. Equations are essential, but they become much more meaningful when students can connect them to actual motion, forces, waves and electrical systems.
For example, simple harmonic motion can initially look like a difficult collection of equations involving displacement, velocity, acceleration, period and frequency.
A swinging pendulum, an oscillating spring or a rotating object casting a shadow can make the relationships much clearer. The student can see that the motion repeats. They can identify the equilibrium position. They can observe where the speed is greatest and where the acceleration changes direction.
The formula is no longer floating separately from the physical event.
The same is true of resonance.
A student may be able to state that resonance occurs when the driving frequency matches the natural frequency of a system. However, seeing salt move into patterns on a vibrating metal plate, hearing the body of a guitar amplify the vibration of its strings or watching one oscillator transfer energy to another gives the definition a real meaning.
Once the student has seen the effect, the examination language becomes easier to understand and remember.
Electricity Should Not Exist Only as Circuit Symbols
Circuit diagrams are essential, but students can sometimes become so focused on the symbols that they lose sight of the actual components.
Building a real circuit allows them to see how an ammeter is connected in series, why a voltmeter must be placed in parallel and what happens when resistance is changed.
A practical investigation can begin with a simple prediction:
What will happen to the current if the resistance increases?
Will two lamps in series be brighter or dimmer?
How does the terminal potential difference change when a cell supplies a larger current?
Why does a potential divider produce a changing output voltage?
Students can then test their predictions using real meters, resistors, lamps, power supplies and sensors.
Mistakes also become useful.
Connecting a meter incorrectly, selecting an unsuitable range or building a circuit that does not work creates an opportunity to diagnose the problem. This is an important scientific and technical skill.
A perfect worksheet rarely teaches troubleshooting.
A real circuit almost always does.
Chemistry Is About Change, Not Just Equations
Chemistry can become overly abstract when it is taught entirely through symbols and written equations.
Students may learn that an acid reacts with an alkali to form a salt and water, but watching an indicator change colour during a titration makes the endpoint much more memorable.
They may learn about precipitation reactions, but seeing a bright solid suddenly appear from two colourless solutions creates a stronger understanding of what “insoluble product” actually means.
Practical chemistry also helps students connect several forms of representation:
What they observe
The word equation
The symbol equation
The ionic equation
The particle model
The explanation using bonding and structure
For example, a displacement reaction is much easier to understand when the student can see a colour change, the formation of a new metal or a change in temperature.
The written equation then becomes an explanation of something the student has actually witnessed.
Biology Comes Alive Through Observation
Biology contains a great deal of terminology, but it is ultimately the study of living organisms and biological processes.
Looking at cells through a microscope gives meaning to words such as nucleus, cell wall, cytoplasm and chloroplast. Measuring the rate of transpiration makes water loss from leaves more than a paragraph in a textbook. Investigating osmosis allows students to observe changes in mass rather than simply memorising the direction in which water moves.
Models can also be extremely helpful.
A model of the heart can show the relationship between chambers, valves and blood vessels. A physical digestive-system model can help students understand how organs are arranged and how food moves through the body. Molecular models can demonstrate how biological molecules are constructed and how enzyme-substrate interactions depend on shape.
Biology becomes more accessible when students can see, handle or measure something connected with the process they are studying.
Practical Work Reveals Misconceptions
One reason demonstrations are so valuable in one-to-one tuition is that they quickly reveal what a student genuinely understands.
A student may confidently predict that a heavier object will fall faster than a lighter one. A motion experiment can test that belief.
Another student may think that current is gradually “used up” as it moves around a circuit. Measurements taken at different points can challenge that idea.
A student may believe that plants obtain most of their mass from the soil. A discussion supported by photosynthesis and gas-exchange experiments can expose the weakness in that explanation.
Misconceptions are not always obvious from written work. A student can learn the expected sentence without changing the mental model behind it.
A well-chosen experiment creates evidence that the student must explain. That process can replace an incorrect model with a more accurate one.
The Value of Prediction
Before an experiment begins, I often ask the student to make a prediction.
This is not simply a guessing exercise.
A useful prediction requires the student to use their existing scientific understanding. They must decide what they think will happen and explain why.
The experiment then provides feedback.
If the prediction is correct, the student’s understanding is strengthened. If the result is unexpected, we have something valuable to investigate.
Why did the result differ from the prediction?
Was the original idea wrong? Was a variable not controlled? Was there a measurement error? Was the equipment used correctly? Is there another scientific principle involved?
This teaches students that science is not about pretending to know every answer. It is about using evidence to improve an explanation.
Practical Science Improves Examination Answers
Practical work is sometimes treated as separate from examination preparation. In reality, it can directly improve examination performance.
Modern science papers frequently ask students to:
Describe a method
Identify variables
Explain how to improve accuracy
Discuss repeatability and reproducibility
Interpret tables and graphs
Evaluate the quality of evidence
Identify anomalies
Calculate uncertainties
Suggest improvements to apparatus
Explain why a result does not support a conclusion
Students who have performed or observed real experiments have something concrete to draw upon.
They understand why a clamp stand must be stable, why a measuring cylinder may be less precise than a burette, why a sensor needs to be zeroed and why several readings should be taken.
They also understand that real data are rarely perfect.
There may be scatter, reaction-time errors, heat loss, friction, parallax or equipment limitations. These are no longer phrases memorised for an examination. They are problems the student has encountered and considered.
That experience leads to more realistic and more convincing answers.
Not Every Practical Needs to Be Large or Dramatic
A successful demonstration does not have to involve flames, explosions or expensive equipment.
Sometimes the best practical is very simple.
A ball rolling down a slope can introduce acceleration. A ruler vibrating over the edge of a desk can demonstrate frequency. A torch and a lens can investigate image formation. A syringe can illustrate pressure and volume. A leaf, microscope or simple potometer can open a discussion about plant biology.
The value of the activity comes from the thinking around it.
What is being changed?
What is being measured?
What pattern should we expect?
How reliable is the evidence?
What scientific idea explains the result?
A small experiment accompanied by good questioning can be more educational than an impressive demonstration that the student merely watches.
Using Modern Equipment Without Losing the Science
Philip M Russell Ltd has access to a dedicated teaching classroom and laboratory, along with sensors, cameras, microscopes, electrical equipment and data-logging systems.
Modern equipment can make difficult processes easier to observe.
A motion sensor can record movement that happens too quickly to measure accurately with a stopwatch. A force sensor can display changes that would otherwise be difficult to detect. A digital microscope can place a detailed image on a large screen. Multiple cameras can provide close-up views of an experiment during online tuition.
However, technology should support the science rather than distract from it.
The objective is not to impress students with equipment. It is to make the scientific idea clearer.
The most useful technology is the technology that allows the student to notice something, measure it accurately and explain it confidently.
Practical Teaching Works Online Too
It is sometimes assumed that online science tuition must be limited to slides and worksheets.
That does not have to be the case.
With carefully positioned cameras, close-up views and suitable microphones, students can observe real experiments remotely. A visualiser can show measurements and apparatus in detail. Data can be captured on screen and analysed during the lesson.
The student can still make predictions, select variables, interpret results and suggest improvements.
In some cases, an online student may obtain a clearer view than they would from the back of a crowded school laboratory. Close-up cameras can show the scale on a meter, the colour change in a reaction or the movement of a component in real time.
The experience is different from physically handling the equipment, but it remains active practical science rather than passive screen-based tuition.
Choosing the Right Tool for the Student
This is not an argument for abandoning worksheets.
Students still need opportunities to practise calculations, write extended answers and become familiar with examination formats.
The important question is whether the teaching method matches the problem.
When a student already understands the concept but needs more practice, a worksheet may be exactly right.
When the student has memorised words without understanding them, another sheet of similar questions is unlikely to solve the problem.
At that point, it may be better to stop, build the circuit, swing the pendulum, examine the specimen, measure the force or observe the reaction.
Good teaching involves selecting the right tool at the right time.
The Difference Made by Philip M Russell Ltd
At Philip M Russell Ltd, practical science is not treated as an occasional extra.
It is part of the way lessons are designed.
The combination of teaching experience, a dedicated laboratory, modern data-logging equipment, video facilities and one-to-one support makes it possible to adapt experiments to the needs of an individual student.
A practical can be paused and repeated. The camera angle can be changed. A sensor can be added. The student can be asked to predict the next result. The apparatus can be modified to address a particular misunderstanding.
Most importantly, the demonstration can be connected directly to the student’s examination specification and the questions they are likely to encounter.
The experiment is not there simply for entertainment. It is there to build understanding, develop scientific thinking and improve the student’s ability to explain.
Conclusion: Science Should Be Experienced
A worksheet can check whether a student remembers a scientific idea.
An experiment can help them understand why that idea matters.
Real demonstrations create memorable moments. They reveal misconceptions, encourage questions, connect mathematics with physical events and give students evidence they can use in examination answers.
There will always be a place for written practice. But when a student is stuck, confused or simply repeating words they do not fully understand, the answer may not be another page of questions.
Sometimes the most effective thing a teacher can do is put the worksheet aside and let the science happen.
That is one of the ways Philip M Russell Ltd—and Hemel Private Tuition—helps students move beyond memorising science and towards genuinely understanding it.

