
Feed our future! Careers poster
Inspire your budding young scientists with potential STEM careers in the food industry and encourage them to enter the Feed our future! competition.
213 results
Inspire your budding young scientists with potential STEM careers in the food industry and encourage them to enter the Feed our future! competition.
Use this freepost label to send in your students’ competition entries, without paying postage
A short guide with curriculum links, and step-by-step instructions for how to deliver the challenge in a 1-hour lesson. Includes ideas for diving deeper, if more time is available.
Students use this entry form to describe their innovative new future-food and enter the competition.
Use this presentation, with video clips presented by Stefan Gates, to recap healthy diets, to discover how our food affects our planet and inspire students to come up with a new food for the future.
Countdown to Christmas with this fun interactive, science advent calendar
2 resources
View LessonGet involved with the STEM volunteering scheme and invite a volunteer into your school. Careers education is all about showing young people different paths to success and the variety of options available.
Use this 2-page poster to inspire seconodary students with the work of black scientists across past and present day.
This real-world challenge dives into the world of fast fashion and its environmental impact. The perfect range of activities for engaging students in conversations around sustainability, science and the choices we make every day.
6 resources
View LessonDiscover the fascinating career of Black British nurse Dame Elizabeth Anionwu. Learn about how her difficult upbringing inspired her to become a nurse and how her important work in sickle cell disease has changed the lives of sufferers. Apply student's knowledge of genetic Punnett squares and blood cells to sickle cell disease and discover careers in nursing.
4 resources
View LessonUse this presentation to learn about the career of pioneering nurse Dame Elizabeth Anionwu, her achievements and legacy in nursing and sickle cell disease.
Using students knowledge of blood cells, breathing and respiration, students discover why sickle cell patients suffer from their symptoms.