On track: technology for runners
When we watch elite runners breaking world records, we rarely think about the chemistry and physics of the running tracks.
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When we watch elite runners breaking world records, we rarely think about the chemistry and physics of the running tracks.
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.
Activities you can use again and again, much like enzymes themselves.
Alginate bubbles are useful in chemistry lessons as well as in molecular gastronomy.
Science in School is published by EIROforum, a collaboration between eight of Europe’s largest inter-governmental scientific research organisations (EIROs). This article reviews some of the latest news from the EIROs.
Welcome to the new issue of Science in School. It may not be so obvious at first glance, but there’s something different about this issue.
The month of May brings with it two different planetary wonders, allowing us to recreate calculations first made 300 years ago
On track: technology for runners
Teaching with Rosetta and Philae
Cracking the genetic code: replicating a scientific discovery
Energising enzyme activities
Molecular gastronomy in the chemistry classroom
Surfing waves, erasing memories and a twist on the tokamak
Editorial issue 36
Mercury and Mars in May