Can something accelerate upwards while falling down?
Use one of the most surprising experiments in classical mechanics to teach the scientific method, video analysis and mechanics.
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Use one of the most surprising experiments in classical mechanics to teach the scientific method, video analysis and mechanics.
Teaching viscosity can be sweetened by using chocolate.
Get your students to use their smartphones for some hands-on astronomy.
Encourage your students to enter our writing competition – and see their work published.
Recreate the epic fight between pathogens and the immune system in your classroom.
How a great achievement of the European Space Agency can become an inspiration for your students.
Get your students to crack the genetic code for themselves.
Alginate bubbles are useful in chemistry lessons as well as in molecular gastronomy.
Measure the distance from Earth to the Moon using high-school geometry and an international network of schools and observatories.
Can something accelerate upwards while falling down?
Melts in your viscometer, not in your hand
Smart measurements of the heavens
Student competition: the search for the strangest species on Earth
Ready, set, infect!
Teaching with Rosetta and Philae
Cracking the genetic code: replicating a scientific discovery
Molecular gastronomy in the chemistry classroom
Geometry can take you to the Moon