Focus on...Communication
Issue 127 | Page 3 | Published Mar 2013
Description
It is hard to open a newspaper or listen to a news report without hearing about the latest scientific research. Scientific literacy is now essential to be able to decipher the advice we are bombarded with – about what we should eat or not eat, why we should recycle or conserve energy, how long we are likely to live or how we should live, and the list goes on. But was it always like this?
More from this issue
Twitter has come of age. If you want to know more about how to use it or what the point of this social network site is then Richard Needham has...
Dan Davies evaluates the impact of a workshop that uses role-play to help children learn about bodily systems and keeping healthy.
Berry Billingsley provides some ideas on ways to teach and conduct discussions about science and religion in schools.