Seagrass the wonder plant!
Did you know that there are flowering plants that live in the sea? The unique characteristics of seagrasses are vital for the health of our planet.
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Did you know that there are flowering plants that live in the sea? The unique characteristics of seagrasses are vital for the health of our planet.
Is it a solid? Is it a liquid? It’s slime! Make slime to explore viscoelasticity and then complete a material science design challenge.
Build a linear accelerator to demonstrate spallation – the source of high-energy neutrons used by the new European Spallation Source being built in Sweden.
Accelerate Your Teaching is a free online course for high-school teachers. Discover how particle accelerator stories can bring a range of STEM topics to life.
Explore the form and function of ‘nature’s tiny sculptures’ – proteins – with an engaging art competition from the European Molecular Biology Laboratory.
Biology, maths, and the SDGs: estimate the CO2 absorbed by a tree in the schoolyard and compare it to the CO2 emissions of a short-haul flight.
Act now for the Sustainable Development Goals: explore resources developed by European teachers bring the science of sustainability into the classroom.
Mealworms are insects with a high nutritional value and could provide a source of animal protein that is more sustainable than traditional livestock.
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.
Seagrass the wonder plant!
Beyond solids and liquids: the science of slime
Build a linear accelerator model
Accelerate your teaching with links to cutting-edge science
Unfold Your World: using art to explore the story of life
How much carbon is locked in that tree?
Sustainability in the classroom: teaching materials from Science on Stage
Towards sustainable nutrition: could mealworms provide a solution?
CERN Science Gateway: a guide for teachers
Grimy windows could be harbouring toxic pollutants