Abstract
How can the experience of making a simple pinhole camera with inexpensive materials help our students think more creatively and critically about light?
How can conversations around an athlete’s record-breaking sprint actively engage our students in learning concepts around linear motion?
What do our students learn about the practice of science when we encourage them to write the biographies of scientists who appear in their textbook?
How do we provide spaces for our students to make and manipulate new materials from old discarded or inexpensive material?
Read this issue to explore these and many other such teaching-learning experiences in middle-stage science and preparatory stage EVS.
