Skip to content
  • Year 3

    Autumn Term

    Animals, including humans

    Pupils should be taught to:

    • identify that animals, including humans, need the right types and amount of nutrition, and that they cannot make their own food; they get nutrition from what they eat
    • identify that humans and some other animals have skeletons and muscles for support, protection and movement
    Rocks

    Pupils should be taught to:

    • compare and group together different kinds of rocks on the basis of their appearance and simple physical properties
    • describe in simple terms how fossils are formed when things that have lived are trapped within rock
    • recognise that soils are made from rocks and organic matter.

    Spring Term

    Light

    Pupils should be taught to:

    • recognise that they need light in order to see things and that dark is the absence of light
    • notice that light is reflected from surfaces
    • recognise that light from the sun can be dangerous and that there are ways to protect their eyes
    • recognise that shadows are formed when the light from a light source is blocked by an opaque object
    • find patterns in the way that the size of shadows change

     

    Plants

    Pupils should be taught to:

    • identify and describe the functions of different parts of flowering plants: roots, stem/trunk, leaves and flowers
    • explore the requirements of plants for life and growth (air, light, water, nutrients from soil, and room to grow) and how they vary from plant to plant
    • investigate the way in which water is transported within plants
    • explore the part that flowers play in the life cycle of flowering plants, including pollination, seed formation and seed dispersal

    Summer Term

    Forces and magnets
    • compare how things move on different surfaces
    • notice that some forces need contact between 2 objects, but magnetic forces can act at a distance
    • observe how magnets attract or repel each other and attract some materials and not others
    • compare and group together a variety of everyday materials on the basis of whether they are attracted to a magnet, and identify some magnetic materials
    • describe magnets as having 2 poles
    • predict whether 2 magnets will attract or repel each other, depending on which poles are facing

     

    •