Save the Date: Back to School 2024-2025 with ESA and ESERO
Discover five exciting projects from ESA and its ESERO network. Use space to motivate and enrich your lessons for out-of-this world STEM lessons!
Article of the week
A species of dandelion is leading the way towards sustainable rubber. Find out how, by growing this unusual plant yourself and extracting the rubber from the roots.
Read moreDiscover five exciting projects from ESA and its ESERO network. Use space to motivate and enrich your lessons for out-of-this world STEM lessons!
Seeing is believing, but how can you be sure that what you see is real? Find out how to distinguish between real and fake astronomical images.
Learn how to do quantitative chemistry using microscale techniques with bottle tops and inexpensive spirit burners that are relatively easy and quick to set up.
We cover a wide range of scientific topics and many articles are additionally available as translations in different European languages.
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Articles from previous issues
Three candles of different heights are lit in a closed space. Surprisingly, the longest candle goes out first. Can you solve the mystery?
Fracking is a hugely controversial technology, so it’s worth taking a closer look at the science behind the…
Alexandre Lewalle from King’s College, London, UK, pushes back the frontiers of our knowledge of motors – at the molecular…
Discover free events and activities offered by the EIROforum members and other non-profit groups.
Discover the wonder of proteins with this exciting science & art competition. Unfold Your World provides free classroom-ready resources and is open to students aged 14–18, who can win prizes and see their artwork displayed in a special exhibition.
Do you have an engaging classroom activity to share with other teachers? Is there an interesting scientific topic that you could explain to STEM teachers and their students? We welcome submissions from teachers and scientists.
Would you like to help ensure that our content is interesting, inspiring and useful to STEM teachers? Consider joining the Science in School teacher reviewer panel. There is no obligation; just send us an email to express your interest.
If you find an article interesting or useful, perhaps you'd consider translating it into your native language? This really helps to increase the reach of our content so that as many teachers as possible can benefit from it.