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British Science Association

Countdown is on to British Science Festival in Southampton Insight into action – exploring the Public Attitudes to Science Survey Celebrating British Science Week 6-15 March 2026 British Science Association selected as the future host of EDIS APPG on Diversity & Inclusion in STEM launches new project on AI equity Smashing Stereotypes is back for British Science Week 2026 Guest blog: Community Led Research Pilot, funder’s reflections Public Attitudes to Science Survey shows the public values science, but highlights concerns over AI, quality of information, and representation Sir Roland Jackson Putting communities in the driving seat: report explores impact of participatory research Dr Alex Lathbridge and Karen Blake MBE named British Science Association Honorary Fellows 2025: Our past year, wrapped A-Level student builds highly-accurate budget Sign-Language-to-speech wrist technology A cautious welcome for key recommendations in Curriculum and Assessment Review Confidence and support to teach science has fallen, primary education report suggests 'It’s through change that science progresses’: Disabled staff in science and medicine lead action for equity Reflections on the British Science Festival in Liverpool Julia King, Baroness Brown of Cambridge's presidential address Report highlights disconnect between data collection and action on EDI in UK science and tech sector CREST website upgraded to transform STEM learning and empower educators across the UK Robo-chemists, eye-trackers and a VR fishing boat: the last day of the British Science Festival 2025 Phages, geophonics and prosthetics: the fourth day of British Science Festival 2025 Whale song, urban farming and science comedy: the third day of the British Science Festival 2025 Climate solutions, pioneering women and particle detectors: the second day of the British Science Festival 2025 Chatbots, ghost particles and neurodiversity: the first day of the British Science Festival 2025 Supporting inclusive entrepreneurship and innovation among and through micro, small and medium sized enterprises (M-SMEs) CREST Awards now free for all young people in Scotland The power of plants: eight events to dig into at this year’s British Science Festival Five health and humanity highlights from this year’s British Science Festival Exploring the wonders of space: five unmissable British Science Festival events ‘Early and meaningful’ public involvement in shaping engineering biology research and policy vital What's it like to work at the British Science Festival as an Evaluations Assistant? Blackpool school pupil launches pop-up science museum and fundraiser in campaign against ‘science deserts’ British Science Festival in Liverpool programme launches Education | Keeping STEM learning going at home From Awareness to Action: Creating Authentic Neurodiversity Support in STEM Workplaces Baroness Brown appointed 2025-26 President of the British Science Association British Science Association Trustee awarded MBE Introducing our new Head of Marketing and Communications Navigating eco-anxiety in the face of the climate change crisis Education| Ten top tips for adapting resources for SEND learners Education| Adapting resources for SEND learners Announcing our British Science Festival 2025 Section Presidents British Science Festival 2025 Award Lecturers announced Education | British Science Week, CREST and going cross-curricular! British Science Association signs open letter on improving climate change education Education | Tips from ten-year-old Poppy and her mum on doing CREST Education | Ten-year-old Poppy explores STEM accessibility - a CREST case study Briefing on Equality, Diversity and Inclusion strategies in STEM makes business case for growth From WhatsApp Group to Nationwide Network: The Birth of the Afro-Caribbean Commercial Science Network ‘Creating knowledge together’ essay series explores power of community-engaged research ‘Action over optics’ - APPG event explores EDI strategies in STEM A celebration that highlights the crucial role of science in our lives British Science Association Council welcomes two new trustees Bringing back Smashing Stereotypes for its sixth year for British Science Week 2025 Science education vital for UK growth and fighting misinformation, British Science Week survey shows Where next for attitudes to science? UKRI, Ipsos, and the BSA announce launch of 2025 public attitudes to science survey British Science Association’s lead strategic partner UKRI welcomes new CEO The Ideas Fund awards £1.73m to community wellbeing projects For Thought | Science, innovation, and society: working together for long-term change Change and adapt for the better with the British Science Week 2025 activity packs! Education | Using Engage Grants to run CREST Discovery Days Diversity and inclusion in engineering are vital for innovation and growth – exploring the evidence Alom Shaha, Gisela Abbam and Tom Crick named British Science Association Honorary Fellows 2024: Our past year, wrapped Education | A Gold CREST Awards case study: bringing AI into dementia healthcare Education | How showcasing STEM careers in the classroom can broaden aspirations New report reveals the impact of communities in the Highlands and Islands leading climate change research AI is ‘the conversation everyone is having’ – but how do we bring in missing voices? University of Southampton to host the British Science Festival in 2026 The BSA's response to the Autumn 2024 Budget Public views on ultra-processed foods Using nature-based learning to inspire young people Black History Month 2024: Celebrating MSD scientists and employees in STEM In conversation with Rob Deeks, CEO of Together As One (TAO) BSA Presidential Address: Professor Kevin Fenton CBE (part three) A tribute to Professor William Gosling DSc FIET BSA Presidential Address: Professor Kevin Fenton CBE (part two) British Science Festival 2024: Highlights BSA Presidential Address: Professor Kevin Fenton CBE (part one) Guest blog: Life’s Big Questions - inspiring connection, curiosity & understanding in young minds Education | How to use a British Science Week Kick Start Grant to help students connect with nature Five must-see events at #BSF24 you don’t want to miss out on! The British Science Festival will be heading to Liverpool in 2025 Professor Kevin Fenton CBE announced as President-Elect of British Science Association Education | CREST and the changes to the UCAS personal statement Make the Most of Plastic-Free July! Education | Early years maths engagement can help combat the attainment gap Education | Our Engage Teacher Conference 2024 round-up Education | Make your medical school application stand out with a CREST Award! Celebrate International Women in Engineering Day with Smashing Stereotypes! Education | Widening access to STEM resources for SEND learners Community Led-Research Pilot: successful grant recipients announced Education | Help students make the most of the summer by earning a CREST Award! Education | Leeds celebrated 2023 with CREST Awards! BSA’s election manifesto calls for a fairer and more prosperous future through science What’s it like to work at the British Science Festival? Education | Exploring reproductive health with CREST! Guest blog | Equality, diversity and inclusion strategies: a scientific approach?
Education | Our Engage Teacher Conference 2025 round-up
2025-06-17 · via British Science Association

This June, members of the Engage Teacher Network and non-members alike joined us for our annual online Engage Teacher Conference. 

The Engage Teacher Network is an almost 3000-strong community of educators working with children and young people from groups most likely to be underrepresented in STEM; from lower socio-economic backgrounds, from ethnic minority backgrounds, attending schools in rural areas and with special educational needs.

The conference is part of a wider British Science Association programme to support teachers working in challenging circumstances. It aims to showcase inspiring best practice and provide practical tips and resources to help educators bring relevant and meaningful science to the classroom for all children and young people. 

If you missed the conference, all 10 sessions were recorded and are available to watch:

Check out the session recordings and presentations

Teacher panels 

There’s no one better to give advice on running British Science Week, supporting young people with SEND and teaching science on a budget, than teachers themselves. So we asked experienced educators from the Engage community to share their wisdom:

At Boost your British Science Week: tap into teacher expertise, attendees heard brilliant suggestions for how to best plan for the Week and great advice about how to use the theme to brainstorm all sorts of cross-curricular connections and link to students’ interests.   

Panellists talked about how the Week is a fantastic opportunity to take some of the formality out of science, and how it’s not just positive for the young people involved; teacher confidence and cooperation develops, too! The next panel session, which wrapped up the first week of the conference, featured teachers from both mainstream and special schools - Unlock inclusive STEM: a teacher panel on supporting young people with SEND.

Practical science can be a brilliant way of engaging children and young people with STEM – it allows them to experiment and see the real-world science in action, it really can be inspiring.

Educators in mainstream settings talked about the importance of ensuring that young people with SEND were given suitable scaffolding and support to do the same work as their peers – keeping the curriculum ambitious for all students through adapted teaching, rather than differentiation. Teachers recommended a range of resources, including from the Primary Science Teaching Trust and the Education Endowment Fund. Find links to all the resources here.

Staying in the area of practical science, the teachers on the panel of Science on a budget: teacher-tested strategies shared priceless experience and approaches to finding free and low-cost ways to bring science to life in the classroom.

Tips included working with other departments in the school to see if they have equipment that could be used in science lessons, connect with local businesses to see if they can help with free resources, and laminate sheets instead of reprinting.

Inclusive practice

Inclusion is the name of the game this conference; as well as the teacher panel about supporting young people with SEND, there were two sessions on inclusive practice run by experts from the Institute of Physics (IoP) and the Association for Science Education (ASE).

At the IoP’s session, Top tips for inclusive science teaching, Eleanor Wylie and Suzanne Woolhouse discussed the importance of using inclusive language, making STEM learning relevant to the student’s lives and highlighting a broad range of STEM-related careers, among many other tips. Find a link to their top tips here.

Rob Butler and Vicki Parry from the ASE ran Engaging every student in science learning through inclusive practice, which encouraged teachers to take an ‘evolution, not revolution’ approach to inclusive science teaching, focusing on how tweaks to practice can meet the need of learners with SEND and better engage students that don’t see science as for them.

The ASE will run their Included and SEND CPD programmes again next academic year. Find out more here: www.ase.org.uk/events.

Showcasing free STEM resources

We know there’s nothing better than free, high-quality teaching resources. So we invited lots of leading STEM organisations to speak at sessions for primary and secondary teachers and showcase the free, accessible materials they have to offer. There’s more out there than you might think!

The secondary session was up first up - Save time and money: free secondary resources from leading providers.

First to present was the Head of Programmes at Apps for Good, who took us through the courses they offer to schools which allow students to develop technology skills and learn how to use it to encourage positive social change.

Attendees also heard from The Royal Society about their Brian Cox school experiments, the Royal Society of Chemistry on their resources which promote science literacy, and the National Education Nature Park on the habitat mapping project.

Caitlin Brown from the Sutton Trust took us through their programmes which support students from backgrounds underrepresented in STEM through to apprenticeships or high education after finishing school.

And if that wasn’t enough, they were joined by speakers from the Institute for Research in Schools, the Royal Academy of Engineering and the Queen Elizabeth Prize for Engineering, sharing their free resources and programmes.    

The primary session kicked off the second week of the conference - Save time and money: free primary resources from leading providers – with CREST Awards, the Royal Society and the National Educational Nature Park making their second appearances.

NUSTEM and the Primary Science Teaching Trust (PSTT) both focused on STEM careers, with PSTT sharing slides sharing ‘A scientist just like me’, a resource for showcasing a diverse range of scientists, while NUSTEM presented their Curriculum Careers Tool, which gives students access to a large database of careers they might not have thought of!   

Attendees also heard from My Science Club, Explorify, the British Ecological Society and Sustrans.

CREST Awards

What would an Engage Teacher Conference be without sessions on CREST? It of course featured in both primary and secondary showcase resources, but attendees were also given the chance to hear more from members of the Education team at the BSA about the benefits of running CREST in dedicated sessions.

Fun and accessible hands-on science for the primary classroom was led by our lovely Education Resources Manager, Catherine Davies.

Catherine discussed the possible barriers to practical science in the classroom, including a lack of time and extra adult support, then shared how using CREST resources can support hands-on learning for children aged 3 all the way up to 11.

She talked through some of the activities, including Plant Detectives and Crafty Rafts, and support available to the Engage community.

The secondary session Turn curiosity into achievement: research and reflection in the curriculum, run our brilliant Education Officer Ruth Mackay, was a deep dive into how secondary CREST projects give students space to think about their approach to STEM, design their own experiments, and embed reflection into project work.  

Funding

One of the final sessions of the conference was on a topic that will make all educator’s ears prick up – funding.

On 12 June, attendees heard from our own Susan Matambanazo, Education Manager at the BSA, and representatives from the Royal Academy of Engineering, the Royal Society of Chemistry, The Royal Society and Learning through Landscapes about a range of opportunities including grants and scholarships at Get funded! Explore STEM grant opportunities for schools.

Other opportunities for STEM in schools

If you teach in a school in challenging circumstances, join our community to hear about events, opportunities, and resources for schools like yours. You can join the network for free.

Check your eligibility and join

*STEM is an acronym for science, technology, engineering and maths 

Thank you to all of the guest experts and educators who contributed to the 2025 Engage Teacher Conference and help contribute to a future where science is more relevant, representative, and connected to society.

 Talk

 Recording

 Speakers

 Boost your British Science Week: tap into teacher expertise

 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Yk-1iyhv6Wc 

Slides

Jessica Smith, Coop Academy Delius

Nida Kidwai, Strood Academy

Katie Weston, The Mosslands School

Katy Tigg, Oak Field School

Melanie Jones, Argyle Primary School

Laura Romay-Castineira, Moniaive Primary School

Save time and money: free secondary resources from leading providers

 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2LBuTxpPJFg 

Slides

Ross Dempster-Johnson, Apps for Good

Ruth Mackay, The British Science Association

Elizabeth Chambers, The Royal Society

Kelly Murfet, IRIS

Scott Atkinson and Rebecca Lindsay, Royal Academy of Engineering

Caitlin Brown, Sutton Trust

Katie Haylor, Royal Society of Chemistry

Dr Sarah Rhodes, Queen Elizabeth Prize for Engineering

Victor Heng, National Education Nature Park

Fun and accessible hands-on science for the primary classroom

 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nqKbEw9Ik00 

Slides

 Catherine Davies, British Science Association

Top tips for inclusive science teaching

 https://youtu.be/SPHT93nWPM0 

Slides

Eleanor Wylie, Institute of Physics

Suzanne Woolhouse, Institute of Physics

Unlock inclusive STEM: a teacher panel on supporting young people with SEND

 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=e3lLMtmzznA 

Slides

Caroline Maston, Lighthouse School

Mark Gray, Ruskin Community High School

Gemma Robson, Wallsend Jubilee Primary School

Jessica Smith, Coop Academy Delius

Nida Kidwai, Strood Academy

Katie Weston, The Mosslands School

Katy Tigg, Oak Field School

Save time and money: free primary resources from market-leading providers

 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MUztdGgtm4A 

Slides

Paul Tyler, My Science Club

Ruby Seger-Bernard, The Royal Society

Catherine Davies, The British Science Association

Joe Shimwell, NUSTEM

Alison Trew, Primary Science Teaching Trust

Sarah Dagnell, Explorify

Helen Bickford, British Ecological Society

Kate Salter, Sustrans

Victor Heng, National Education Nature Park

Turn curiosity into achievement: research and reflection in the secondary curriculum

 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dAmxddJd3VM 

Slides

 Ruth Mackay, British Science Association

Engaging every student in science learning through inclusive practice

 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1sv8LIl27HU 

Slides

Rob Butler, Association for Science Education

Vicki Parry, Association for Science Education

Science on a budget: teacher-tested strategies

 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5AMMK1E53r0 

Slides

Charlotte Doherty, Lenham Primary School

Laura Taylor, Somercotes Academy

Lisa Frost, Manchester Road Primary Academy

Preeti Anchan, Hamilton School

Get funded! Explore STEM grant opportunities for schools

 https://youtu.be/L3_7fe2Um3Q 

Slides

Dominique Sleet, Royal Academy of Engineering

Chrissie Maitland, Royal Society of Chemistry

Elizabeth Chambers, The Royal Society

Kirsty Waterhouse, Learning through Landscapes

Susan Matambanadzo, British Science Association