Tea-time chemistry
Tea is a refreshing drink – and it can also help students to learn about important chemical reactions, as these simple experiments with infusions demonstrate.
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Tea is a refreshing drink – and it can also help students to learn about important chemical reactions, as these simple experiments with infusions demonstrate.
Have fun with fruit while helping your students to explore the concepts of area and volume, and learn more about their real-world applications.
A negative result from a medical test means you definitely don’t have the condition, right? Wrong: it depends on the false negative rate of the test and on your individual risk.
Explore electromagnetic induction and of one of its well-known applications – the induction hob – with these hands-on activities.
Not just for remote teaching: virtual labs really came into their own during the COVID-19 pandemic, but they can generally be a useful addition to the STEM teacher’s toolbox.
The rush to find treatments for COVID-19 led to a badly flawed clinical trial influencing medical treatment worldwide. What went wrong?
Do you find the binary system complicated? With this activity, your students will find it as easy as 01,10,11.
How do scientists piece together genomic information from sequencing data? Play these two fun online puzzles to find out.
Explore phase transitions between different states of matter through a series of engaging hands-on experiments.
Take another look at some of our favourite articles from recent issues of Science in School.
Tea-time chemistry
Maths with fruit
How to understand a COVID-19 test result
Faraday’s law of induction: from classroom to kitchen
Virtual labs, real science
Clinical trials count on more than statistics
Teaching binary code with a secret word challenge
Microbial genome puzzles
States of matter & phase transitions
Recent highlights from Science in School