Colour Chromatography for Kids — Hidden Colours in Every Marker

You already have everything you need for this one — washable markers, a glass of water, and a thick paper napkin. What happens next will genuinely surprise you. Colour chromatography for kids: the science experiment hidden inside every marker.
Make Plastic from Milk: The Chemistry Experiment That Could Change the World

ne glass of milk, a splash of vinegar, and a mould from the kids’ playdough kit. This chemistry experiment makes a real natural polymer your daughter can shape, colour, and keep — and opens up one of the biggest conversations in science right now.
The States of Matter Experiment That Breaks All the Rules

Two ingredients, one bowl, and a states of matter experiment your kids won’t stop talking about. Make a non-Newtonian fluid at home — it’s part solid, part liquid, and one hundred percent messy fun.
25 Physics Facts for Kids

You know that moment when your child asks you something completely out of nowhere and you think, I genuinely have no idea how to answer that? These 25 physics facts are your answer. Real science, no jargon, and just enough background to make you sound like you knew it all along.
Women in STEM: Lene Hau – The scientist who stopped light.

In 1999, Danish physicist Lene Hau did something that sounded impossible — she slowed light from 186,000 miles per second to just 38 miles per hour. Then she stopped it completely. Here’s her story, written for curious girls and the parents who want to inspire them.
Women in STEM: Lise Meitner — The Physicist Who Split the Atom and Never Got the Credit

She solved one of the biggest scientific mysteries of the twentieth century. Her male colleague got the Nobel Prize. She got an element on the Periodic Table named after her instead. This is the story of Lise Meitner — and why your daughter deserves to know her name.
The Inertia Hat — A Physics Experiment Your Kids Will Want to Wear

Balance a coat hanger on your child’s head, give them a spin — and watch their face when the coat hanger refuses to move. This is Newton’s First Law of Motion, and it’s one of the most satisfying physics experiments you can do at home.
5 Science Tricks with a Glass That Will Amaze Your Kids

Grab a glass from the kitchen cupboard. That’s genuinely all you need to completely blow your child’s mind this afternoon.
3 Kitchen Physics Activities That Reveal the Reality of Newton’s Laws

Newton figured out how everything in the universe moves — and he did it over 300 years ago. Three kitchen activities, twenty minutes, and your child will understand why his laws are still unbeaten today.
Women in STEM: Mary Anning – the girl who sold seashells and changed science

Discover the story of Mary Anning — the girl who uncovered prehistoric creatures and changed science forever — plus a hands-on fossil experiment for kids.