…AND AFTER THE WEEK IS DONE AND DUSTED
DON’T FORGET …
On Wednesdays, from March 4th to May 20th:
This is the BIG question: How did you get here? You started your journey 14 billion years ago, when you were an atom – one among many – and then………
Each week, a video of the the next chapter in your journey is followed by Q&A, games, science tricks and more, to help you understand, because an understanding of our past helps to explain our present, and assist our future.
Students must be accompanied by a parent. Click on the picture of your ancestor to find out more



Discover the secrets of the everyday chemicals in your kitchen. Make glue from skimmed milk! Release oxygen from washing powder, carbon dioxide from cake mixture and hydrogen from lemon juice and find out how to identify these gases. These hands-on science sessions are presented by Terry Page from the Royal Society of Chemistry.
The story of the Earth, from the Big Bang, through to the present, and on to the future. First the formation of the stars, planets, and Earth. Secondly how life began, and evolved into humans; how humans work and how they created the modern world. Third, how to make the future better.
40 people – children and families – play with blocks and strings and cans and stuff, and build an amazing machine, which sets off another amazing machine, and another, and they altogether miraculously send a signal right across the hall. This is Incredible

The Pocket Science Funfair is a travelling roadshow full of hands-on activities for kids. Each stall offers a puzzle or a challenge, with a little bit of science thrown in. You’ll play funfair games, solve optical illusions and construct Rube Goldberg machines. Parents can join in, and our team will be on hand to help explain the facts behind the fun.
‘Alice in Wonderland’ and ‘Alice Through the Looking Glass’ are two of the greatest, craziest children’s books. We are going to have fun and games with them – drop down some new rabbit holes, dig out the topsy-turvy, surreal ideas and jokes, and discover that quite a lot of the madness is basically science.