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Science in School is published by EIROforum, a collaboration between eight of Europe’s largest intergovernmental scientific research organisations (EIROs). This article reviews some of the latest news from the EIROs.
Scientists are searching deep underground for hard-to-detect particles that stream across the Universe.
USB-powered sequencers smaller than your smartphone could revolutionise the way we decode DNA – in hospitals, in remote locations and even in space.
Discover CERN’s brand-new science education and outreach centre in Geneva, Switzerland: CERN Science Gateway!
Accelerate Your Teaching is a free online course for high-school teachers. Discover how particle accelerator stories can bring a range of STEM topics to life.
Would you know how to turn a bucket into a seismograph, how to make a scale model of a DNA double helix from cans and bottles, or how to simulate a human eye with the help of a shampoo bottle? Barbara Warmbein from the European Space Agency in Noordwijk, the Netherlands, finds out.
We are relative newcomers on Earth and still have a lot to learn. Julian Vincent from the University of Bath, UK, investigates some of the lessons we can learn from the living world.
The most exciting recent education event for me was Science on Stage, EIROforum’s international teaching festival. I enjoyed meeting many of the 500 teachers attending from 28 countries – listening to their suggestions, hearing about their experience and marvelling at their innovative teaching…
Unpicking scientific mysteries across Europe
Science goes underground
Decoding DNA with a pocket-sized sequencer
CERN Science Gateway: a guide for teachers
Accelerate your teaching with links to cutting-edge science
Science teachers take centre stage
Is traditional engineering the right system with which to manipulate our world?
Welcome to the fifth issue of Science in School