Science on stage and in action
Andrew Brown reviews the latest Science on Stage event in Spain: Ciencia en Acción.
Showing 10 results from a total of 17
Andrew Brown reviews the latest Science on Stage event in Spain: Ciencia en Acción.
The topic of polymers is often limited to chemistry lessons. The Establish project offers some hands-on activities to investigate these materials and some of their medical applications.
To change the world would be amazing enough. Mike Brown changed the Solar System. Eleanor Hayes explains.
When your doctor prescribes you a tablet and you get better, was it really the drug or could it have been the colour of the tablet? Andrew Brown investigates the placebo effect.
What makes ostriches such fast runners? Nina Schaller has spent nearly a decade investigating.
Marco Martucci tells Eleanor Hayes what science teaching and radio journalism have in common.
Did you realise that fireworks cause measurable air pollution? Tim Harrison and Dudley Shallcross from Bristol University, UK, explain how to investigate atmospheric pollutants in class.
Meet an astronaut, cook a comet and plan a trip to Mars. Shamim Hartevelt introduces a recent teacher workshop at ESA.
Claudia Mignone and Rebecca Barnes explore X-rays and gamma rays and investigate the ingenious techniques used by the European Space Agency to observe the cosmos at these wavelengths.
Science in School is published by EIROforum, a collaboration between eight of Europe’s largest inter-governmental scientific research organisations. This article reviews some of the latest news from the EIROforum members (EIROs).
Science on stage and in action
Polymers in medicine
How I killed Pluto: Mike Brown
Just the placebo effect?
Birds on the run: what makes ostriches so fast?
A science teacher on air
Smoke is in the air: how fireworks affect air quality
Science teaching in space: the ESA teachers workshop
More than meets the eye: unravelling the cosmos at the highest energies
Trapped by scientists: antimatter, cholesterol and red blood cells