A
while ago, while my daughter was still at primary school, I wrote about how
challenging I found her homework.
Perhaps
somewhat unsurprisingly, I can report that this gets much, much worse at
secondary school level.
A
good example - science homework - construct a molecule model or a DNA helix. What?
How? We didn't know where to
start. We turned to the great oracle of
our times and 'Googled' it.
Once
we knew what a molecule model looked like, daughter chose titanium nitrate to
construct (not sure why!), and we decided to head to The Range. The Range will have all we need, we said
confidently.
The
Range did indeed come up trumps with polystyrene balls of various sizes, plus
cocktail sticks. It failed on a larger
size ball though, needed for the central component of the model, so we bought a
polystyrene rose bud (who even knew they existed?), and then husband shaved it
until it was spherical - we're nothing if not resourceful.
Then
daughter sat, for most of a Saturday afternoon, colouring in the polystyrene
balls, while trying to stop the ink coming off on the carpet and warding off
the dog who thought the balls looked like great fun and he'd really like to
carry one off and chew it thoughtfully in front of the fire.
When
she'd finished, and the cocktail sticks were also partly coloured in, the
titanium nitrate was constructed and indeed looked just like the one Google had
shown us.
It
took pride of place on the dining room table so it didn't get damaged before it
was due to be handed in, and it was out of reach of the nosy Labrador who found
it all terribly intriguing. Carrying it
on the bus to school was tricky, I hear, but thanks to a large bag-for-life it
survived the journey relatively intact.
I
then heard that some people had just bought kits from Amazon and handed those
in, but that's not quite the spirit is it?
There's nothing like a bit of 'Blue Peter' ingenuity - now where's my
sticky-back plastic?!
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