Filters
Clear allSubject
- Careers (8) Apply Careers filter
- Climate Change (2) Apply Climate Change filter
- Computing (43) Apply Computing filter
- Creative arts and media (1) Apply Creative arts and media filter
- Cross curricular (42) Apply Cross curricular filter
- Design and technology (130) Apply Design and technology filter
- Engineering (47) Apply Engineering filter
- Food Preparation and Nutrition (23) Apply Food Preparation and Nutrition filter
- Mathematics (96) Apply Mathematics filter
- Psychology (2) Apply Psychology filter
- Science (304) Apply Science filter
- Space (7) Apply Space filter
- STEM Ambassadors (1) Apply STEM Ambassadors filter
- STEM Clubs (11) Apply STEM Clubs filter
Age range
Type
- (-) Remove Activity sheet filter Activity sheet
- Article (1) Apply Article filter
- Assessment (11) Apply Assessment filter
- Audio (6) Apply Audio filter
- Data set (15) Apply Data set filter
- Experiment (6) Apply Experiment filter
- Game (7) Apply Game filter
- Group work (9) Apply Group work filter
- Image (29) Apply Image filter
- Information sheet (72) Apply Information sheet filter
- Interactive resource (10) Apply Interactive resource filter
- Poster (11) Apply Poster filter
- (-) Remove Presentation filter Presentation
- Quiz (3) Apply Quiz filter
- (-) Remove Teacher guidance filter Teacher guidance
- Video (73) Apply Video filter
- Include Physical Resources (26274) Apply Include Physical Resources filter
Showing 447 results
Inspired by the Born to Engineer video from Kim Cave-Ayland, an engineer whose work is helping to create a safe, low polluting power source that could change our energy future, this resource supports students to work with data on UK energy consumption, exploring how energy generation is managed and what type of...
In this activity, students use the speed, distance, time equation to calculate how long it takes to travel to destinations around the globe from the UK via today's global transport options. They are then introduced to a new concept to global travel: the vacuum tube...
This activity examines the use of percentages in research and the media. The examples used focus on the distinction between absolute and relative percentages and percentage changes. The need for improved education in the area of communication of risk is at the heart of...
This activity shows how Earth observation can be used to study human geography by comparing the satellite images of Las Vegas over the last few decades. Linking to measurement of irregular areas and addition and multiplication of fractions, it asks children to measure the area of Las Vegas at three separate times...
This brief activity uses false-colour images of the Columbia glacier to introduce the idea of using sequences of satellite images to monitor change and focuses on the selection of appropriate data for an investigation.
This activity introduces students to an exciting technique at the forefront of brain research, functional magnetic resonance imaging, or fMRI. Researchers use this powerful imaging technique to pinpoint precisely which areas of the brain are associated with different activities.
The activity guides students...
This activity focuses on the link between the UK’s current water usage and the predicted increase expected in the future. Looking at a water board website, students think about how the website is set up and the formulae that are being used. They then work in groups to...
Produced by The Centre for Industry Education Collaboration (CIEC), these resources help to put curriculum science in a real life context.
Children follow the use of water from a reservoir, through an industrial site where it is treated, used as cooling water, and treated again before being returned to a...
This activity looks at water consumption on a local and global scale. Students learn about the main water contaminants and various methods of purification and the role of engineers and their approach to design challenges. The resource aims to inspire an interest in water conservation and to introduce students to...
This short activity introduces students to the ideas of the footprint and resolution of an image, asking them to choose and use appropriate methods to calculate how these quantities would change as they moved a camera to a series of vantage points above the surface of the Earth
This activity uses a humorous video to raise a serious question: can science tell us what animals are saying, and interpret their emotions? The Bow-lingual dog translator claims to detect animal emotions by analysing bark sounds waves. Students use research evidence to decide whether the device does what it claims...
The Nuffield Foundation provide this resource which can be used to introduce the idea of representing objects using plans and elevations. Students will have the opportunity to identify everyday objects photographed from plan and elevation views, draw 3D sketches of solids from their plan and elevation views, as...
From ARKive, this creative activity is designed to teach 7-11 year olds about endangered species, what it means to be endangered and what causes a species to become endangered. It also features examples of conservation in action and ideas for how the students can help. After a presentation, each student is given an...