Not just a blueprint for proteins: the importance of non-coding RNAs
We all know that DNA → RNA → protein. But did you know that some genes don't encode proteins but rather RNAs with important cellular functions?
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We all know that DNA → RNA → protein. But did you know that some genes don't encode proteins but rather RNAs with important cellular functions?
Use the Education corner on the Eurostat website to bring real-life data to your class and teach your students about statistics.
Picture sequences provide engaging opportunities for students to explore the concepts of speed and acceleration using supplied digital images or their own smartphones.
Learn about a variety of biochemical aspects of honey through a series of simple experiments using the sugary product of bees.
A waste of space: years of human activity in space have left thousands of objects in orbit around the Earth. Learn more about the risks they pose and what we can do about it.
Space is a great topic for inspiring students while teaching curriculum-relevant science. Start now with ESA’s teach with space program.
Plants today are extremely diverse, abundant, and flamboyant. However, the first land plants, which initiated a great change in the flora and fauna on planet Earth, were very different.
Meet the planarian, a fascinating flatworm with incredible biological abilities unique and surprising ways responses to various stimuli.
Do air convection currents really move as they are drawn in textbook illustrations? Let’s make invisible convection currents visible using mist.
We can’t image our home galaxy from the outside, so how do we study it? Learn how astronomers unveil the dramatic past of the Milky Way and peer into its future.
Not just a blueprint for proteins: the importance of non-coding RNAs
Eurostat’s Education corner: your key to European statistics
Moving pictures: teach speed, acceleration, and scale with photograph sequences
To bee or not to bee: the chemistry of honey
Objects in orbit: the problem of space debris
Save the date for Back to School with ESA 2023–2024
When plants moved ashore and changed the planet
Hands-on experiments with planaria
A misty way to see convection currents
Galactic Archaeology: how we study our home galaxy