Brian Cox school experiments
Find the full set of the videos including subtitled versions on the Royal Society YouTube Channel. If you have used these resources we would appreciate your feedback, which you can give via the survey button below.
The Brian Cox school experiments are a series of free videos and resources, designed to inspire and engage students with practical science. The featured topics link directly to the STEM curriculum, with the new secondary level resources featuring new and emerging technologies. Each video interview introduces STEM career pathways and offers insight into the cutting-edge work being done by scientists in their fields.
This series supports teachers, especially non-specialist STEM teachers, to embed practical learning into the curriculum. The focus on industrial applications and latest research taking place within each topic, help to contextualise the experiments and show how the science students study in the classroom is relevant in today's world.
There are primary level and secondary level resources, with resources tailored to each age group. Each topic within the video series includes accompanying resources, designed to be used alongside the classroom experiments by teachers, students and technicians.
If you have used these resources we would appreciate your feedback, which you can give via this survey .
Related Resources
Brian Cox school experiments - primary level
The Royal Society presents video resources featuring Professor Brian Cox demonstrating classroom experiments across the primary science curriculum.
Brian Cox school experiments - secondary level
The Royal Society presents video resources featuring Professor Brian Cox and Dame Maggie Aderin-Pocock demonstrating classroom experiments across the secondary…
IMAGES
VIDEO
COMMENTS
Subscribe and 🔔 to the BBC 👉 https://bit.ly/BBCYouTubeSubWatch the BBC first on iPlayer 👉 https://bbc.in/iPlayer-Home Brian Cox visits NASA’s Space Power ...
You probably know that two objects dropped in a vacuum fall at the same rate, no matter the mass of each item. If you’ve never seen a demonstration of this, ...
Because the shape of the feather allows it to endure way more air resistance than the bowling ball, it takes much longer to fall to the ground. British physicist Brian Cox wanted to see this primary-school problem play out in a …
The Brian Cox school experiments are a series of free videos and resources, designed to inspire and engage students with practical science. The featured topics link directly to the STEM curriculum, with the new secondary …
Brian simulates extreme gravity - Wonders of the Universe: Falling - BBC Two. BBC. 14.4M subscribers. Subscribed. 1.2K. 184K views 13 years ago #bbc. Subscribe and 🔔 to the BBC 👉 https://bit...
Prof Brian Cox explores the fundamental force of nature that shapes our Universe - Gravity. Ratings and Critical smash hit. Wonders of the Universe. Nominated for…
BBC presenter Brian Cox drops a bowling ball and a feather in NASA's Space Simulation Chamber in an experiment to see which would hit the ground first in a vacuum.
In this excellent clip from the BBC’s Human Universe: Episode 4, Professor Brian Cox visits NASA’s Space Power Facility in Ohio, home of the world’s biggest vacuum chamber, to test Galileo Galilei ‘s Leaning Tower of Pisa experiment, …