“Science in School” – highlighting the best in science teaching and research
Posted on July 7th, 2010 in General
For any science teachers out there looking for ways to broaden the scope and variety of their classes for the new school year, the answer could be “Science in School”, a European journal dedicated to the promotion of inspiring science teaching.
The journal covers not only the traditional scientific pillars of physics, chemistry, and biology, but also maths, engineering, and earth sciences, highlighting the best in teaching and cutting-edge research.
Each edition includes teaching materials, announcements of recent discoveries, interviews with young scientists and inspiring teachers, details of educational projects, book reviews, and European events for teachers and schools.
Best of all, “Science in School” is available free of charge. An English-language print version is distributed across Europe, and online articles are published on the website.
Science teachers are welcome, and encouraged, to contribute to the journal, by:
- Submitting articles for publication
- Joining the referee panel and helping to decide which content to publish
- Reviewing books and other resources for teachers
To subscribe, learn more about the journal, or read some of the published articles, see the “Science in School” website.
“Science in School” is published and funded by Eiro forum, a partnership between Europe’s seven inter-governmental research organisations – the European Organisation for Nuclear Research (CERN), the Joint European Torus (JET), the European Molecular Biology Laboratory, the European Space Agency, the European Southern Observatory, the European Synchotron Radiation Facility (ESRF), and the Institut Laue-Langevin (www.eiroforum.org).







