Teach radioisotopes and decay interdisciplinarily at a low cost
How to teach radioactive decay and radioisotopes to students who feel that equations are boring? Here are two inexpensive and captivating activities to apply in your classroom!
Article of the week
We’ve all been there: we see a stunning astrophotography image that has gone viral on social media, showing perhaps a huge full Moon aligned with some landmark or the Milky Way arching in the sky above some exotic location. But then we start second-guessing ourselves – something doesn’t look…
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How to teach radioactive decay and radioisotopes to students who feel that equations are boring? Here are two inexpensive and captivating activities to apply in your classroom!
Using pond snails as a low-cost, hands-on model to teach biology and environmental science in secondary schools.
Meet antimatter – nature’s invisible twin that could explain our existence and inspire our wildest stories.
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Articles from previous issues
Tim Birkhead tells Karin Ranero Celius about promiscuous birds and teaching science…
Can we meet all our energy needs with renewables? How can energy models help us to explore the future of energy? And how can we all become part of…
Climate change is nothing new. Caitlin Sedwick describes how a computer model is helping scientists to explain the extinction of the woolly…
Discover free events and activities offered by the EIROforum members and other non-profit groups.
Introduce your students (15+) to cutting-edge science by joining the EMBL Insight Lecture with Dr Julia Mahamid on 16 December and explore how cryo-electron tomography reveals life’s hidden molecular machinery in stunning detail.
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If you find an article interesting or useful, perhaps you'd consider translating it into your native language? This really helps to increase the reach of our content so that as many teachers as possible can benefit from it.