Horrible Science Explained

Horrible Science
Author:Nick Arnold
Phil Gates
Illustrator:Tony De Saulles
Cover Artist:De Saulles
Country:United Kingdom
Subject:Science
Genre:Children's literature
science writing
Publisher:Scholastic
Pub Date:1996–present

Horrible Science is a similar series of books to Horrible Histories, written by Nick Arnold (with the exception of Evolve or Die, which is written by Phil Gates), illustrated by Tony de Saulles and published in the UK and India by Scholastic. They are designed with the intention to get children interested in science by concentrating on the trivial, unusual, gory, or unpleasant. The books are in circulation in 24 countries, and over 4 million books have been sold in the UK alone.[1]

Nick Arnold released a paper entitled "Teaching Science the Horrible Way",[2] in which he demonstrates the reasons why the Horrible Science series has a positive contribution to learning. According to Arnold, Horrible Science books are based on everyday topics and key areas of the curriculum. The range of approaches used in Horrible Science books are intended to emphasise the drama and excitement and wonder of science. Science words and concepts are introduced gradually, often using humour or fact files. Although mathematics is not needed at the level of science covered in the books, some activities require calculators. The books contain experiments under the heading "Dare you discover...". Several of the books end with thoughts on how science will shape the future.

History

Before writing the series, Nick Arnold was at the University of North London working on an educational project. He explained to The Birmingham Post: "It was actually a lucky break or a well-placed letter – whichever you want to believe – Because I wrote this really cheeky letter to the publishers Scholastic saying that if they were looking for someone to write a horrible science book I was the one. And would you believe they actually let me write a science book and put lots of horrible bits in it – and then it was hugely successful”.[3]

During the mid-2010s, Horrible Science was given a book makeover, altering the covers of some of their old books, and all of the new books being published to have a new, more colorful background and updated information.

A Horrible Science theatre show produced by the Birmingham Stage Company which, also brought Horrible Histories to the stage, was created in 2013.[3]

Approach

Nick Arnold explained his approach towards writing the series in an interview with The Birmingham Post: "My approach to a subject is to vastly over-research it. I have become quite good at science by writing these books so have got quite a lot of knowledge already but then I really like finding out more information. If I over-research then I don’t just have all the facts I need, I have a lot more – and that means I can really choose what I want to include. The thing about a Horrible Science book is that actually it is all about imagination. The more you know the more you want to know and the more you want to develop that."[3]

Critical reception

The response towards the series has been generally positive. Some reviews of the series website [4] included a The Independent review that "Really Rotten Experiments" is "Perfect for keeping the kids occupied on a rainy day, this is full of useful tips...and fun, naughty experiments". Another review by the Evening Express (Aberdeen) said that the book Horrible Science: Painful Poison is "With fantastic fact files, quirky quizzes, humorous cartoons and easy-to-understand text, it makes science pretty horrible, but great fun". Books For Keeps said of the book Deadly Diseases: "Gruesome gut churning contents, you need a strong stomach to tackle this, and certainly before eating". The Scotsman commented on the series as a whole, "Nick Arnold has a reputation as quite a showman and his Horrible Science series provides him with plenty of opportunity for stunts. Children emerge wide-eyed and inspired". A review at [5] described the series as "These are so much better than some of the dry textbooks that I used to have to read when I was in school...I'm saying that books like this are great for students because they show students that science is truly interesting and amazing!". A review by Roberta of the Growing with Science blog said of the book Chemical Chaos: "It is every bit as humorous (downright silly in spots) and as comprehensive as the history series was". She adds that the "[series as a whole] go a long way to fill that gap [between middle and high school students". As said of Evil Inventions in a review by Jennifer Cameron-Smith at:<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.amazon.com/Evil-Inventions-Horrible-Science-Arnold/product-reviews/0439943736|title=Amazon.com: Customer Reviews: Evil Inventions (Horrible Science)|work=amazon.com|accessdate=15 April 2015}}</ref> "This is a delightful book and would make a wonderful present for any budding young scientist as well as a worthwhile addition to a school library. Making science fun can sometimes be a challenge, but books such as this certainly assist." ===Controversy=== There has been a negative response to Issue 6 - ''Hidden Horrors'' in the Home in the magazine adaption of the book series. The article named "Loony Lab" in this ''Horrible Science Collection'' had a section called "Grow your own manky microbes". A complainant, a biology teacher and parent, described it as "irresponsible in the extreme". A plastic petri dish and sachet of agar powder are provided as "free gifts", and children are encouraged to sample areas which may harbour disease-causing organisms (pathogens), such as a toilet handle, a dog's ear, or a "bogey". Under certain circumstances, contact with these substances is potentially life-threatening. The complainant added "The potential for real harm is jaw-dropping. Even in school, under supervision of trained staff, we would not be allowed to do much of what the article suggests, namely for health and safety reasons. How can they be sure that every child will follow even the meagre and woefully inadequate safety advice given?"<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.ise5-14.org.uk/prim3/New_Guidelines/Newsletters/33/Horrible_Science.htm |title=Interactive Primary Newsletter 33 - "Horrible Science" magazine - a health warning |accessdate=2010-12-15 |url-status=dead |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20100416150011/http://www.ise5-14.org.uk/prim3/New_Guidelines/Newsletters/33/Horrible_Science.htm |archivedate=2010-04-16 }}</ref> ===Awards and nominations=== The ''Horrible Science'' series has received the following awards :<ref>[http://www.horrible-science.co.uk/reviews Reviews] horrible-science.co.uk

Book categories

Original books

These are the original books in the core series:

Omnibus editions and boxed sets

There are several "Two in One" editions:

There have also been Three in One editions such as Ugly Bugs, Nasty Nature and Vicious Veg, a set of 10 books (Vicious Veg, Space, Stars, and Slimy Aliens, Ugly Bugs, Bulging Brains, Deadly Diseases, Chemical Chaos, Disgusting Digestion, Blood, Bones, and Body Bits, Nasty Nature, and Evil Inventions) titled Ten Beastly Books, and a set of 20 (Angry Animals, Blood, Bones and Body Bits, Bulging Brains, Chemical Chaos Deadly Diseases Disgusting Digestion, Evolve or Die, Fatal Forces, The Fight for Flight, Frightening Light, Killer Energy, Microscopic Monsters, Nasty Nature, Painful Poison, Shocking Electricity, Sounds Dreadful, Space, Stars, and Slimy Aliens, The Terrible Truth About Time, Ugly Bugs, and Vicious Veg) titled Bulging Box of Books.

Activity books

Shuffle puzzle books

Jigsaw books

Sticker-activity books

Others

It may be noted that the Sticker-Activity books have been renamed, along with their new design, by dropping the "Sticker" aspect and leaving "Activity".

Annuals

Specials

There are a couple books in the Horrible Science series that have a special sign on the front cover that indicate their inclusion in the "Special" sub-series of Horrible Science:

Handbooks

Following suit with the other main Horrible series', Horrible Science has recently introduced a new range of books, known as Handbooks.

Teachers resources

The Horrible Science Teachers Resources subseries is, as described by Nick Arnold: "a whole series of books full of expert tips and photocopiable resources designed for pupils aged 7–11".

Others

These are the books that do not fit into the other categories. They are:

Magazines

There is also a magazine collection to this series, which is collectively known as the Horrible Science Collection. This series was originally planned to encompass 60 issues, but due to their popularity, another 20 were added to the series.The titles are as follows:

  1. Beastly Body Bits - (Human Body)
  2. Chemical Chaos - (Chemicals)
  3. The Smashing Solar System - (Solar System)
  4. Disgusting Digestion - (Digestive System)
  5. Shocking Electricity - (Electricity)
  6. Hidden Horrors In The Home - (Bacteria and Germs)
  7. Bulging Brains - (Brains)
  8. Savage Spiders & Slippery Slimeballs - (Spiders and Slugs)
  9. Rotten Reactions - (Chemical Reactions)
  10. Beastly Bloody Body Bits - (Human Body)
  11. Awful Earth - (Earth)
  12. Mad as Matter - (Matter)
  13. Painful Poisons - (Poisons)
  14. Bones 'n' Groans - (Bones)
  15. Insect Invaders - (Insects)
  16. Super Sleuth - (Spies Codes)
  17. Nasty Nature - (Nature)
  18. Fearsome Fuels - (Fossil Fuels)
  19. Deadly Diseases - (Diseases)
  20. Gruesome Gravity - (Gravity)
  21. Mean Machines - (Machines)
  22. Universe & Worse.... - (The Universe)
  23. Vicious Veg - (Plants)
  24. Body Owner's Manual - (Body Parts)
  25. Lethal Lightning - (Lightning)
  26. Mean Mammals - (Mammals)
  27. Mighty Magnetism - (Magnetism)
  28. Awesome Ants & Sleazy Bees - (Ants and Bees)
  29. Fatal Forces - (Forces)
  30. Crazy Cures & Revolting Remedies - (Cures)
  31. Barmy Birds - (Birds)
  32. Blast Off! - (Spacecraft)
  33. Evil Evolution - (Evolution)
  34. Horrible Heat - (Heat)
  35. Freaky Fish - (Fish)
  36. Startling Senses - (The 5 Senses: Sight, Smell, Taste, Touch and Hearing)
  37. Sounds Dreadful - (Sound)
  38. Sinister Swamps - Swamps)
  39. Ghastly Genes - (Genes)
  40. Microscopic Monsters - (Microorganisms)
  41. Growing Up Grossly - (Growth)
  42. Foul Frogs & Slimy Toads - (Frogs and Toads)
  43. Terrible Time - (Time)
  44. Frightening Light - (Light)
  45. Dangerous Dinosaurs - (Dinosaurs)
  46. More Painful Poisons - (Poisons)
  47. Fearsome Flight - (Flight)
  48. Foul Food - (Food)
  49. Staying Alive - (Survival)
  50. Fearsome Flying Machines - (Flying Machines)
  51. Revolting Reptiles - (Reptiles)
  52. Dead Freezing - (Cold)
  53. Noisy Nature - (The animal kingdom)
  54. Mad Medicine - (Medicine)
  55. Foul Fungi - (Fungi)
  56. More Dangerous Dinosaurs - (Dinosaurs)
  57. Blinding Light - (Light)
  58. Gruesome Germs - (Germs)
  59. Slimy Sea Monsters - (Sea creatures)
  60. It's About Time - (Time)
  61. Perilous Planes - (Planes)
  62. Big And Bad Beasts - (Dangerous Animals)
  63. Shady Spies - (Spies)
  64. Musical Mayhem - (Sounds and Music)
  65. Prehistoric Pests - (Prehistoric Life)
  66. Baffling Brainboxes - (Human Brain)
  67. Mind Boggling Materials - (Matter)
  68. Pesky Plants - (Plants)
  69. Wicked Weather - (Weather)
  70. Underwater Uglies - (Aquatic animals)
  71. Mean Body Machine - (The Human body)
  72. Rowdy Robots - (Robots)
  73. Gruesome Guzzling - (Eating and Digestion)
  74. Nuclear Nasties - (Nuclear power)
  75. Mind Magic - (Science of magic)
  76. Hairy Humans - (Evolution of humans)
  77. Freaky Future - (Futurology)
  78. Horrid Healthcare - (Health and Medicine)
  79. Awful Inventions - (Inventions, Technology)
  80. How to be a Suffering Scientist - (Scientists)

There have also been three 'special' magazines in the series:

S1. DIY Shocking Science - (Experiments)

S2. Spooky Science - (Hallowe'en and Monsters)

S3. Alien Science - (Aliens)

Flip charts

On 3 March, 2008, several online flip charts (aka Activlessons) were released by Promethean Planet.[9] [10] As the site explains, "these ready-made interactive whiteboard resources have instant child-appeal, making the teaching of the QCA Science units fun and effective". The titles included are:

TV series

In May, 2015, British television network CITV announced that filming had begun on a new ten-part TV series of Horrible Science. The series is produced by Toff Media, a company owned and founded by comedians Ben Miller and Alexander Armstrong, and co-owned by Hat Trick Productions.

The series stars Ben Miller, stand-up comedian Chris Martin, Tom Bell, Jason Forbes, Letty Butler, Susan Wokoma and Eleanor Lawrence. There will also be some guest appearances by other actors.[11]

The series focuses on a science show and its crew that consist of the show's host Mark (Martin), a talking brain Professor McTaggart (Miller) (who hosts the segment called The Brain Dump), robot Bob (Bell), microscopic Professor Small (Lawrence) and her crew of scientists and the show's producer Lucy (Butler). Armstrong provides the voice of the unseen announcer Tannoy who tells the crew how long until the show starts. Each episode also features a famous scientist being interviewed by either Mark or McTaggart. In a similar vein to the TV adaptation of Horrible Histories, each episode also concludes with a song that serves as a parody of another popular song.

Episodes

Series 1

Series 1 began on 13 September 2015.

No.
overall
No.
for series
Title Director Writer

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Welcome to Horrible Science – Horrible Science. horrible-science.co.uk. 15 April 2015.
  2. Web site: Teaching Science the Horrible Way. https://web.archive.org/web/20110714181241/http://www.nickarnold-website.com/teacher/Teaching%20Science%20the%20Horrible%20Way.pdf. dead. July 14, 2011.
  3. Web site: Horrible Science finds all the ingredients for a good children's story. 29 November 2013. birminghampost. 15 April 2015.
  4. Web site: Welcome to Horrible Science – Horrible Science . horrible-science.co.uk . 15 April 2015 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20150323035133/http://horrible-science.co.uk/reviews . 23 March 2015 .
  5. Web site: abasiccurriculum.com. 15 April 2015.
  6. Book: House of Horrors (Horrible Science): Nick Arnold, Tony De Saulles: 9781407116730: Amazon.com: Books. 978-1407116730. Arnold. Nick. 2012. Scholastic .
  7. Book: Annual 2012 (Horrible Science): Amazon.co.uk: Nick Arnold, Tony De Saulles: 9781407129648: Books. .
  8. Book: How to Draw Horrible Science: Amazon.co.uk: Tony De Saulles: 9781407111018: Books. .
  9. http://www.prometheanplanet.com/en/Resources/Item/32105/ Resources
  10. http://www.prometheanplanet.com/en/Products/PublisherCreatedResources/Series/Item/47987/ Series
  11. Web site: Press Releases. Press Centre.