Doctor in the morning, researcher in the afternoon
For doctor Stefan Pfister, efforts to cure cancer happen at the hospital and in the laboratory.
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For doctor Stefan Pfister, efforts to cure cancer happen at the hospital and in the laboratory.
Bring discovery into the classroom and show students how to evaluate Planck’s constant using simple equipment.
A simple fungus used to brew beer is now used around the world to advance cancer research.
Iodine, with its characteristic purple vapours, has myriad applications – from the familiar disinfectant to innovative solar cells.
A group of German researchers is bringing to light the medicinal wisdom of the Middle Ages.
Having difficulties explaining black holes to your students? Why not try these simple activities in the classroom?
Evolutionary relationships can be tricky to explain. By using simple, everyday objects, your students can work them out for themselves.
Using nothing but a pig’s heart, a knife and a supply of water, you and your students can investigate how the heart pumps.
How do we find out what’s going on inside a volcano? Using cosmic rays!
In the African forest, Fabian Leendertz and his team look for new infectious agents that can be transmitted from animals to humans. Could one of them cause the next pandemic?
Doctor in the morning, researcher in the afternoon
Classroom fundamentals: measuring the Planck constant
From model organism to medical advances
Purple fumes: the importance of iodine
Monastic medicine: medieval herbalism meets modern science
Peering into the darkness: modelling black holes in primary school
Phylogenetics of man-made objects: simulating evolution in the classroom
From the bottom of our hearts: a hands-on demonstration of the mammalian heartbeat
The secret life of volcanoes: using muon radiography
Evolving threats: investigating new zoonotic infections