Tuesday, 5 May 2026

Cameras, Water, and Experiments – Filming in Difficult Environments


 

Cameras, Water, and Experiments – Filming in Difficult Environments

Filming in a lab is controlled.
Filming on a boat… is not.

In the lab, I can decide:

  • Where the camera goes
  • Where the light falls
  • When the experiment happens

If something goes wrong? Stop. Reset. Try again.

On the water?

The boat moves.
The wind changes.
The light shifts.
And occasionally… everything gets wet.

Your carefully planned shot list quickly turns into a set of suggestions.


When the Environment Takes Control

Filming on a river or at sea introduces variables you simply can’t control:

  • Constant motion (even when you think you’re still)
  • Changing wind direction and strength
  • Reflections and glare from the water
  • Spray, rain, and the occasional full soaking

And then there’s timing.

In a lab, you can create the moment.
On a boat, you have to catch it.

Miss it… and it’s gone.


Choosing the Right Tools for the Job

This is where equipment choice stops being about image quality… and starts being about survival.

Rugged Reliability

The Olympus Tough TG-7 (and similar models in the range) have become a staple for me.

Why?

Because they are:

  • Waterproof
  • Shockproof
  • Small enough to mount almost anywhere

They don’t mind:

  • Spray
  • Rain
  • Being clipped onto a moving boat

And that changes how you film.

You stop worrying about protecting the camera…
…and start focusing on capturing the moment.


The Rise of the 360 Camera

For dynamic environments, nothing quite matches a 360 camera.

Instead of trying to point the camera perfectly…
you record everything.

Then later:

  • Reframe the shot
  • Choose the angle
  • Follow the action

It’s a completely different mindset:
Don’t aim. Capture.

Because when the boat suddenly heels, the sail snaps across, or someone shouts “duck!”…

You don’t have time to adjust a tripod.


Mounting, Positioning, and a Bit of Ingenuity

Getting the shot isn’t just about the camera—it’s about where you put it.

On a boat, that might mean:

  • A fixed mount on the bow
  • A pole or jib arm for dynamic angles
  • A higher mast position for a “drone-like” view

Each position tells a different story:

  • Low angle → speed and power
  • High angle → movement and layout
  • Onboard → immersion

And yes… occasionally it involves a bit of improvisation and a hope that the mount holds.


Sound: The Forgotten Challenge

Video is only half the battle.

Audio on the water is… challenging.

You’re competing with:

  • Wind noise
  • Water movement
  • Engine hum (if using a powerboat)

Which means:

  • External microphones need protection
  • Positioning is critical
  • Sometimes… you accept that audio will need to be added later

It’s not ideal—but it’s realistic.


Lab vs Boat – Two Completely Different Mindsets

In the Lab

  • Plan the shot
  • Control the variables
  • Repeat until perfect

On the Water

  • Set up in advance
  • Hope for the moment
  • Capture whatever happens

Both are valid.

But they require completely different approaches.


And Then There’s the Science Filming Crossover

Interestingly, the two worlds—lab and boat—aren’t as separate as they seem.

Filming experiments outdoors or in unpredictable environments brings the same challenges:

  • Light changes
  • Wind interference
  • Limited setup time

So the skills transfer:
Be ready
Be flexible
Capture first


Capture First. Refine Later.

This is the key principle.

Don’t chase perfection in the moment.

Because:

  • The lighting won’t wait
  • The wind won’t wait
  • The action definitely won’t wait

Instead:
Capture as much as possible
Sort it out in editing

With modern editing tools, you can:

  • Stabilise footage
  • Reframe shots
  • Adjust exposure
  • Cut around imperfections

But you can’t fix what you didn’t record.


Why This Matters (Beyond Filming)

There’s a broader lesson here—one that applies to:

  • Teaching
  • R&D
  • Content creation

You don’t need perfect conditions to start.

You need:

  • The right tools
  • A flexible approach
  • A willingness to adapt

Because the best moments?

They are rarely planned.


And That’s the Point

Some of the most interesting footage:

  • Happens unexpectedly
  • Lasts seconds
  • Can’t be repeated

A sudden gust.
A perfect turn.
A near miss.
A moment of genuine reaction.

You either capture it…

…or you don’t.



Monday, 4 May 2026

Why Every Student Needs a Different Explanation

 


Why Every Student Needs a Different Explanation

Mary can solve complex maths problems with ease… until mechanics appears.
Tammy knows all the psychology… vaguely.

Same lesson. Same teacher. Completely different needs.

That’s the reality of 1:1 tuition.

Teaching isn’t delivering information.
It’s diagnosing misunderstanding.

And once you see that clearly, everything changes.


The Myth of “Just Explain It Better”

In a traditional classroom, the assumption is simple:

If students don’t understand, explain it again… but clearer.

But here’s the problem—clear for whom?

An explanation that works perfectly for one student can completely miss the mark for another.

  • One student needs structure
  • Another needs visualisation
  • Another needs a real-world example
  • Another just needs to slow everything down

So repeating the same explanation rarely fixes the issue.

It just reinforces the confusion.


Two Students, Two Very Different Problems

Let’s go back to Mary and Tammy.

Mary – The Logical Thinker Who Gets Stuck

Mary is excellent at maths:

  • Algebra? Fine
  • Calculus? No problem

Then mechanics appears… and everything falls apart.

Why?

Because mechanics isn’t just maths—it’s applied thinking:

  • Interpreting diagrams
  • Choosing the correct model
  • Understanding forces before writing equations

Mary’s issue isn’t ability.
It’s translation—turning a real-world situation into maths.

What she needs is not more equations.

She needs:
👉 Diagrams
👉 Step-by-step interpretation
👉 “What does this actually mean?”


Tammy – The Knowledge Collector

Tammy is studying psychology and seems confident:

  • She recognises all the terms
  • She’s heard all the theories

But when it comes to exam questions?

Everything becomes… vague.

She writes:

  • General ideas
  • Half-formed explanations
  • Broad descriptions

Her problem isn’t lack of knowledge.

It’s lack of precision.

She needs:
👉 Structure
👉 Definitions
👉 Depth over breadth


Same Lesson? Not Even Close

Put Mary and Tammy in the same classroom, and they receive the same explanation.

But they don’t need the same explanation.

  • Mary needs help starting the problem
  • Tammy needs help finishing it properly

That’s why 1:1 tuition works.

Because it allows you to adjust—not just what you teach, but how you teach it.


Teaching as Diagnosis

In 1:1 sessions, the first task isn’t teaching.

It’s listening.

  • Where does the student hesitate?
  • What assumptions are they making?
  • What are they not seeing?

Because mistakes are rarely random.

They are patterns.

And once you spot the pattern, you can fix the root cause.


Common Types of Misunderstanding

Over time, you start to see the same categories appear:

1. The “I Don’t Know Where to Start” Student

They freeze at the first step.

Fix:
Break problems into entry points. Give them a starting strategy.


2. The “I Know This… Sort Of” Student

They recognise everything—but can’t apply it.

Fix:
Drill down into specifics. Force precision.


3. The “I Rush and Miss Things” Student

They make avoidable mistakes.

Fix:
Slow them down. Build checking habits.


4. The “I Memorise But Don’t Understand” Student

They can recall—but not adapt.

Fix:
Change contexts. Test understanding, not memory.


The Power of Changing the Explanation

Sometimes the breakthrough comes from something very small:

  • Drawing a diagram
  • Using a different analogy
  • Reordering the steps
  • Asking a different question

Suddenly:
👉 “Oh… I see it now.”

And that moment is everything.

Because once a student sees it, they don’t forget it.


Why This Matters More Than Ever

In exam systems, students are judged on:

  • Precision
  • Application
  • Clarity

Not just knowledge.

Which means:
👉 Understanding how a student thinks is more important than what they know.


What 1:1 Tuition Really Provides

It’s not just:

  • More time
  • More attention

It’s:

  • Targeted explanations
  • Immediate feedback
  • Adaptation in real time

Instead of:

“Here’s the lesson.”

It becomes:

“Let’s figure out how you think—and build from there.”


And This Is Where Confidence Comes From

Students don’t lose confidence because they can’t learn.

They lose confidence because:
👉 The explanation never quite fits.

Give them the right explanation…
…and suddenly they realise:

👉 “I can actually do this.”


So What Changes?

Everything.

  • Lessons become conversations
  • Mistakes become useful
  • Progress becomes visible

And most importantly…

Students stop feeling like they’re “bad at a subject”
…and start understanding how to approach it.

From Logo to Poloshirt – Building a Home Production Studio


 

From Logo to Poloshirt – Building a Home Production Studio

There was a time when producing branded clothing meant committing.
Bulk orders. Long lead times. Proofs, revisions, delays… and then a box arriving weeks later with something that was almost right.

Now?

I can walk into my workshop in the morning with an idea…
…and by lunchtime be wearing it.

Not a prototype. Not a mock-up.

A finished, usable product.


The Quiet Revolution in Home Production

What’s changed isn’t just the technology—it’s the accessibility.

Tools that were once the preserve of factories and specialist companies are now:

  • Desktop-sized
  • Relatively affordable
  • Surprisingly easy to use

And when you combine a few key technologies, something quite powerful happens.


The Core Toolkit

1. Heat Transfer Printing (Fast, Flexible, Immediate)

This is often the starting point—and for good reason.

Design your logo, cut or print the transfer, apply heat… and you’re done.

Why it works:

  • Fast turnaround (minutes, not days)
  • Ideal for small runs or one-offs
  • Perfect for testing designs

Want to try three versions of a logo? You can.
Not sure about sizing or placement? Test it live.

It’s the equivalent of a rough draft—but one you can actually wear.


2. Machine Embroidery (Professional Finish)

Embroidery adds that step up in quality—the difference between “homemade” and “professional.”

It takes more preparation:

  • Digitising the design
  • Setting thread paths
  • Stabilising the fabric

But once it’s dialled in, the results are:

  • Durable
  • Wash-resistant
  • Visually premium

For branding (especially something like your PMR Sailing or Champagne projects), this is where identity really starts to come alive.


3. Laser Etching (Precision & Versatility)

This is where things extend beyond clothing.

Laser etching opens up:

  • Wooden signage
  • Equipment labelling
  • Acrylic panels
  • Personalised tools

It’s not just about merchandise—it’s about building a complete branded environment.

Imagine:

  • Laser-etched lab equipment
  • Custom signage for your studio
  • Branded components for your sailing projects

Now everything connects.


From Concept to Product – The Workflow

The real power comes from how quickly you can move through the process:

  1. Idea – A logo, phrase, or concept
  2. Design – Created or adjusted digitally
  3. Prototype – Heat transfer for rapid testing
  4. Refinement – Adjust size, colour, placement
  5. Final Version – Embroidery or etched elements

All in-house. All under your control.

No waiting. No outsourcing delays. No minimum order quantities.


Why This Changes Everything

1. Creativity Without Risk

You’re no longer committing to 50 shirts just to test an idea.

You can:

  • Try bold designs
  • Make mistakes
  • Iterate quickly

And that’s where the best ideas come from.


2. Rapid Prototyping for Real Projects

Take something like your A-Rater Champagne project.

You can:

  • Design a logo in the morning
  • Test it on clothing immediately
  • Refine branding across multiple items

Before the boat even hits the water, the identity is already there.


3. Integration with Teaching and R&D

This is where it gets particularly interesting.

The same mindset applies across everything you do:

  • Teaching: explain → test → refine
  • R&D: build → measure → improve
  • Production: design → make → iterate

Students can even see this process in action:
Ideas becoming real, tangible objects

Which is far more powerful than abstract theory.


4. Cost vs Value

Yes, there’s an initial investment in equipment.

But over time:

  • Cost per item drops dramatically
  • Waste is reduced
  • Flexibility increases

And perhaps most importantly—you’re not paying for someone else’s production timeline.


The Bigger Picture – A Personal Production Ecosystem

What you end up with isn’t just a workshop.

It’s a production studio:

  • Designing
  • Making
  • Filming
  • Teaching

All interconnected.

A logo created for a polo shirt becomes:

  • A graphic in a video
  • A brand on a boat
  • A visual identity across your business

Everything reinforces everything else.


And Perhaps the Best Bit…

There’s something deeply satisfying about it.

Taking an idea from your head…
Turning it into something physical…
And then actually using it in your day-to-day work.

It’s the same satisfaction as:

  • Building a piece of lab equipment
  • Capturing the perfect photograph
  • Completing a successful lesson

Except this time…

👉 You can wear the result.

Saturday, 2 May 2026

From Aluminium Tube to Air Track – Building Physics Equipment on a Budget

 


From Aluminium Tube to Air Track – Building Physics Equipment on a Budget

There are few pieces of physics equipment as satisfying—and as eye-wateringly expensive—as an air track. Smooth, near-frictionless motion. Beautiful data. Perfect for teaching Newton’s Laws, momentum, and energy.

Also… often £300+ for a decent setup.

Or… about an afternoon in the workshop and a bit of ingenuity.


Why an Air Track?

An air track allows gliders to float on a cushion of air, dramatically reducing friction. That means:

  • Cleaner data
  • Clearer demonstrations
  • Happier students (and teachers!)

In a school or lab setting, this is invaluable when demonstrating:

  • Constant velocity motion
  • Acceleration
  • Collisions (elastic and inelastic)
  • Conservation of momentum

The DIY Approach

The principle is beautifully simple:
Push air through small holes → create a cushion → reduce friction.

What You Need

  • Aluminium square or triangular tube (the straighter, the better)
  • A drill (and patience!)
  • End cap or sealant
  • A reasonably powerful air blower (in my case, a Makita)
  • Optional: 3D printed or improvised gliders

The Build

  1. Drill a series of small holes along the length of the tube
    • Even spacing is key
    • Keep holes small and consistent
  2. Seal one end completely
    • This forces air down the tube rather than escaping immediately
  3. Attach the blower to the other end
    • A snug fit helps maintain pressure
  4. Turn it on… and watch the magic
    • Objects placed on top should gently float

What You Get (For a Fraction of the Cost)

You won’t get a polished commercial finish—but you will get:

  • A fully functional low-friction track
  • Excellent teaching capability
  • A brilliant talking point for students

And perhaps most importantly…

A demonstration of engineering thinking in action


Teaching Opportunities

This isn’t just equipment—it’s a lesson in itself.

You can involve students in:

  • Designing the hole spacing
  • Predicting airflow effects
  • Measuring friction before and after
  • Comparing results with theoretical models

It turns a standard practical into a full STEM investigation.


Real Classroom Impact

In my lab, building equipment like this is part of a wider philosophy:

If students can see how something is made, they understand it far more deeply.

That’s why combining:

  • A workshop
  • A laboratory
  • A filming studio

…creates something quite special.

Students don’t just use the equipment—they understand it, question it, and even improve it.


Final Thoughts

Buying equipment is easy.

Building it?
That’s where the real learning happens.

And when a student sees a glider floating on air and realises:
“We made this…”

That’s a moment you simply can’t buy.

Friday, 1 May 2026

Why a TV Studio Beats a Classroom for 1:1 Science Teaching (…and Why You Still Need a Lab)

 


Why a TV Studio Beats a Classroom for 1:1 Science Teaching (…and Why You Still Need a Lab)

There was a time when the height of classroom technology was a slightly wonky overhead projector and a pen that never quite worked when you needed it.

Fast forward to today, and I find myself teaching GCSE and A-Level science from what is, essentially, a small television studio.

And I’ll say this carefully… I wouldn’t go back.

The traditional classroom has a fundamental limitation: visibility. One demonstration at the front, twenty or thirty students trying to see it, and at least half missing the crucial moment when the colour changes, the flame flickers, or the result actually happens.

In my setup, every student gets the front row seat—every time.

With multiple cameras, close-ups, overhead visualisers, and live switching, I can show:

  • A chemical reaction in real time
  • A graph being constructed step-by-step
  • A calculation worked through clearly

And if needed? We go again. Instantly.

No “you should have been watching more closely.”
No “we don’t have time to repeat that.”

Just clarity.


But here’s the important bit… the studio is only half the story

A studio lets you see the science.

A laboratory lets you do the science.

And you really need both.

Because science isn’t just about watching something happen—it’s about:

  • Setting it up
  • Making decisions
  • Getting it slightly wrong
  • Adjusting and trying again

That’s where the lab comes in.

Behind the cameras sits a fully equipped teaching laboratory, which means I can move seamlessly from explanation to demonstration to investigation.

Want to see electrolysis? We run it.
Want to test rates of reaction? We set it up.
Want to change a variable? We do it live.

Not a pre-recorded video. Not a fixed result.

A real experiment. In real time.


And this is where it becomes genuinely powerful

Because the student isn’t just watching.

They’re in control.

In a traditional lesson, the teacher decides:

  • What experiment to do
  • How to do it
  • What variables to change

In my setup, the student can say:
“What happens if we double the concentration?”
“Can we try a different metal?”
 “What if we heat it instead?”

And instead of saying “we don’t have time”… we do it.

Immediately.

The student becomes:

  • The planner
  • The investigator
  • The decision-maker

I simply operate the equipment safely and ensure the science is sound.


It’s the closest thing to being in the lab… without the limitations

In schools, practical work is often restricted by:

  • Time
  • Equipment availability
  • Safety constraints
  • Class size

Here, those barriers are reduced.

The student gets:

  • A clear, close-up view (thanks to the studio)
  • Hands-on decision making (through the lab)
  • Immediate feedback and repetition

They are not passively copying results.

They are actively creating them.


And something interesting happens…

Confidence grows.

Students who were hesitant start asking:
“Can we try this?”
“What if we change that?”

Because they know they’ll see the result clearly… and understand it.

That’s when science stops being something to memorise…
…and starts becoming something to explore.


So why both a studio and a lab?

Because each solves a different problem:

  • The studio solves visibility and explanation
  • The lab solves experience and investigation

Put them together, and you get:
Clear understanding
Active learning
Genuine engagement

And most importantly…

Students who don’t just learn science—but start to think like scientists.