Despite following different curricula, there was agreement across all nations that there is too much content to teach within the time available
This was a particular challenge at Key Stage 4 (KS4, age 14-16) for state schools in England, Wales and Northern Ireland, where 73% of respondents said the amount of content was a challenge across all sciences. And, when looking at chemistry specifically, one in four teachers said this is a barrier to great science teaching.
Teachers said that changes to the curriculum and assessment would have the biggest positive impact on science education. This was consistent across all nations.
The curriculum has too much in it, and then you end up having to rush through things to get everything covered, which is the biggest problem. There’s not enough time.
Teaching science for those students who are likely to only get a level 2 or below in a way that's useful to their lives rather than trying to get them a GCSE grade which is too low to be useful, i.e. teaching them how vaccines actually work or how insulating their house is important.
What we are doing
We will continue to influence the development of chemistry curricula and qualifications by governments and other authorities in the UK and Ireland.
In The elements of a successful chemistry curriculum we set out a framework for what we believe is the core of a chemistry curriculum. It is designed to inspire learners and demonstrates chemistry’s potential to address some of the major problems facing society today.
We know from our previous research that educators and young people think that climate change and sustainability should be priorities for the chemistry curriculum. Read more in our report Green Shoots: A sustainable chemistry curriculum for a sustainable planet.
Through our Linking curriculum to careers and Real job profiles webpages, we will continue to help teachers contextualise learning and to demonstrate the breadth of careers that chemistry opens doors to.
The grants and funding we offer run throughout the year and include:
- the Chemistry Teaching Empowerment Fund which supports collaborative projects to improve chemistry teaching or foster supportive and effective chemistry teaching communities
- Elevating Chemistry, helping teachers to address the impacts of COVID-19 on learning
- the Outreach Fund for developing chemistry-based enrichment activities
- funding from the RSC’s Biological and Medicinal Chemistry Sector for small educational projects
Explore more headline findings from the survey
Related links
Education website
Our education website brings together all our online support for chemistry teaching in one place
Take part in the 2023 survey
Help to inspire change in the education sector
Related pages
- The Science Teaching Survey 2023
- The elements of a successful curriculum - our vision for 11-19 chemistry education
- New insights into the school science technician workforce
- Teacher training during the pandemic and the long-term impact on practical work in schools
- Higher technical education - research provides new insight into the needs of learners, providers and employers
- Listen to our award winning podcasts covering many aspects of sustainability
- See all our chemistry education policy
- See our inclusion and diversity policy
- See all our policies, reports, evidence and campaigns