CERN Science Gateway: a guide for teachers
Discover CERN’s brand-new science education and outreach centre in Geneva, Switzerland: CERN Science Gateway!
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Discover CERN’s brand-new science education and outreach centre in Geneva, Switzerland: CERN Science Gateway!
Dirty windows can harbour potentially harmful pollutants under protective films of fatty acids from cooking emissions – and these can hang around for long periods of time.
Lactase tablets for managing lactose intolerance can be used in the classroom to explore the biochemistry of sugars and the properties of enzymes.
Redox reactions carried out by inexpensive baker’s yeast during breadmaking can also be used to demonstrate biofuel cells in the classroom.
Learn how to do quantitative chemistry experiments involving reaction rates using microscale techniques that are relatively easy and quick to set up, without expensive equipment.
Which is better: tap or bottled water? Try these activities based on simple analyses, a debate, and a blind tasting to learn about drinking water and encourage sustainable habits.
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.
CERN Science Gateway: a guide for teachers
Grimy windows could be harbouring toxic pollutants
Explore enzymes and the science of lactose intolerance using lactase tablets
Simple biofuel cells: the superpower of baker’s yeast
Quick quantitative chemistry – the microscale way
What are you drinking? Tap water versus bottled water
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