Access Keys:

 
 
St John Fisher Primary, a Catholic Voluntary Academy, Sheffield
SJF Parent/Carer Questionnaire 2024: Please click here. It closes at 4.00pm on Friday 5th July 2024. Thank you. | SJF Transition Days 2024 |1-3 July 2024 |Please click here| Please note that children will go straight to their new classes each morning (including Monday 1st July) | TERM 6 CURRICULUM OVERVIEWS | Please click here  | Child with SEND? Please click here. | Reading for pleasure - for our SJF Book List, please click here.  | Catholic Schools Inspection (March 2024), please click here. | Be Safe Be Happy Week: Free smoke alarms supplied and installed by South Yorkshire Fire and Rescue | Call: 01142532341 | Text: FREE to 87023 | Email:  cfsadmin@syfire.gov.uk | Latest Newsletters: Click here | Automatic Alerts: tick the appropriate box(es) at the bottom of the homepage and leave your email address to receive automatic reminders and alerts. Your family and friends across the world can do the same! | Our School Office is open between 8.30am and 4.30pm
open new window
pause
play

Y6 Science: Evolution & Natural Selection

29th Jun 2024

This term, the children of Y6 have been studying Charles Darwin's theory of evolution by natural selection. We began our learning in this unit by studying Darwin's life, including his voyage aboard the HMS Beagle and his work as a naturalist on the Galápagos Islands.

We also discussed the social and religious implications of Darwin's discovery within Victorian Britain, as well the ways in which significant faith leaders, including Pope Francis, have explained how evolution can be consistent with a religious worldview. 

The children then learnt about the scientific evidence that exists supporting Darwin's theory, including the wealth of evidence gathered by paleontologists from the fossil record, which builds on the children's prior learning on fossilisation from Y3. The children produced excellent work in their books, explaining and illustrating their understanding that the fossil record suggests the evolution over time of simple, unicellular life, to complex animals such as ourselves. 

This week, we have studied the driving force of the evolutionary process: natural selection. The children have learnt about the process by which individuals within a species who are best adapted to survive within their environment, pass on their well-adapted genetics to their offspring. We contrasted this with countertheories by contemporaries of Darwin, such as Jean-Baptiste Lamarck, discussing how modern science provides evidence for natural selection. 

The children have found our studies so far to be fascinating, and we look forward to continuing our learning in the coming weeks.