In 1895, she began teaching at the
Central Foundation Girls' School in east London, where she was responsible for 'organizing the science work of the School'. She was a proponent of the heuristic method of teaching, on which she published a paper in 1896; her work was praised as an early and thorough trial of the method in a girls' school. She also argued that the chemistry of 'the laboratory' should be taught rather than
domestic science, a point she argued at the International Congress on Technical Education in 1897. She gave occasional lectures on science teaching in girls' schools at the Maria Grey College in 1897. In 1901, she became the first woman to be appointed an Inspector under the
Board of Education (Science and Art Department). She also advised on laboratory design at
Colston's Girls' School in 1902. By 1939 she was also serving on the Schools Advisory Sub-Committee. == Writing ==