Science at home: ideas for remote teaching
Here are some ideas for home-based experiments and other learning activities that students can do outside the classroom, all drawn from the Science in School Teach archive.
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Here are some ideas for home-based experiments and other learning activities that students can do outside the classroom, all drawn from the Science in School Teach archive.
Here’s another scientific crossword puzzle to help keep your students busy – and perhaps even a little entertained.
Would your students prefer to grow edible crops or wrangle with statistics? Here’s a way to combine these activities in a real-world application of statistical analysis.
As space missions venture to the moons of Jupiter and Saturn – and beyond – to look for the conditions for life, what alien life forms might be found in such exotic environments?
Are you tempted to buy ‘superfoods’ for health reasons, despite the higher prices? These activities encourage students to explore some of the claims made for these celebrity foods.
Use a common chemical technique from the field of forensics to reveal fingerprints in the laboratory.
Try these crossword puzzles as an entertaining way for your students to brush up on their science general knowledge.
Theoretical physicist Maria Ubiali reflects on her role as a particle phenomenologist working at the interface between theory and experiment.
In Arctic regions, landscapes are changing fast. This has profound effects on their biological systems, but how are communities and their traditional lifestyles affected?
The possibility of worlds beyond our own has fascinated people for millennia. Now technology is bringing these other worlds – or exoplanets – within reach of discovery.
Science at home: ideas for remote teaching
Science (and more) crossword
Grow your own statistical data
Alien life and where to find it
Are ‘superfoods’ really so super?
Solving crimes with chemistry
Science crosswords
Phenomenal physics
The social science of climate change
Hunting for exoplanets