Girls Go Circular: your key to engaging STEM Education
Ready to bring circular economy concepts to your classroom and teach your students hands-on STEM and digital skills? Explore Girls Go Circular!
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Ready to bring circular economy concepts to your classroom and teach your students hands-on STEM and digital skills? Explore Girls Go Circular!
Chasing rainbows: the interaction of an electric current and magnetic field in a solution with pH indicator gives amazing colour patterns as electrolysis occurs.
Circle of life: explore sustainability, the circular economy, and chemical analysis by evaluating coffee waste as a potential soil enhancer.
From science fiction to reality: explore how continued innovation in 3D printing is supporting scientific progress in a range of different fields.
Peas please: discover how scientists are investigating pea-based ‘milk’ foams for delicious, environmentally friendly, plant-based cappuccinos!
Not sure how best to source and create images for sharing your teaching materials? It’s a snap if you follow these simple tips!
Starstruck: with just water, sunlight, and simple equipment, students can use their physics knowledge to calculate the temperature of the Sun.
Go with the flow: build a model using simple materials to convert the energy of water waves into electricity and explore key concepts relating to energy.
Ready to rock: discover what mysterious belts of dust, ice, and rock around distant stars can tell us about the formation of planetary systems.
Dive into the science proteins, the remarkable macromolecules that literally build our bodies, and explore the vital roles they play in our lives.
Girls Go Circular: your key to engaging STEM Education
Colourful electrolysis vortex in a magnetic field
Chemistry in a coffee cup: does coffee waste contain key elements for plant growth?
The exciting future of 3D printing
Pea-based foams for a greener cappuccino
Picture perfect: making the most of images when creating and sharing teaching resources
Estimation of the Sun’s temperature without leaving the school
Electricity from sea waves
A new survey of exocomet belts is changing what we know about planetary systems
Nature’s body builders: explore the fascinating world of proteins