
Adventures in cyanoprinting: where art and chemistry meet
Try a project that blends chemistry, art, and peer learning, as secondary school students teach younger students how to create nature-inspired cyanotype prints.
Article of the week
Global warming and the associated climate change are the greatest challenges facing humankind over the next ten years. A reduction in the levels of the greenhouse gas carbon dioxide (CO2) plays a key role in mitigating climate change. As trees absorb CO2 to generate their own biomass, they are part…
Read moreTry a project that blends chemistry, art, and peer learning, as secondary school students teach younger students how to create nature-inspired cyanotype prints.
Sounds good: try some simple activities that use robots to explore the basic properties of sound waves – reflection, absorption, and propagation.
Low cost, high impact: try these creative and engaging experiments that use inexpensive everyday materials to bring curriculum science to life.
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Articles from previous issues
There is an increasing demand for an interdisciplinary approach to teaching, but providing inspiring and achievable lessons is no easy task.…
Dudley Shallcross and Tim Harrison from Bristol University, UK, illustrate chemistry experiments relevant to climate…
Chasing rainbows: the interaction of an electric current and magnetic field in a solution with pH indicator gives amazing colour patterns as electrolysis occurs.
Discover free events and activities offered by the EIROforum members and other non-profit groups.
EMBL invites teachers to join this free virtual course for an overview of cell biology and omics, and inspiration for teaching the topic in the classroom. It runs from 29 Sept to 12 Oct 2025 and offers a mix of live sessions and self-paced materials
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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.