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Gather your supplies! In this episode we will learn about chemical reactions...or when two things mix together and become something new!
The National Education Policy (NEP) 2020 has prompted the NCERT to make substantial changes to its textbooks for Class 7. The English and social science courses now place more emphasis on Indian ...
“Part 1 only covers six months worth of social science study for Class 7, and Part 2 is being envisioned for the next six months,” the official said. The new textbook is structured around ...
Still, the book’s message is both timely and timeless: Skepticism about how the world around us operates is valuable, but it must be guided by science.
But science fiction doesn’t fit into such neat categories these days, and 2025 is about to prove how the imagination of authors in this genre never stop asking, “What if?” One book of 2025 ...
The federal government is investing $2.3 million into Science North in Sudbury, for the expansion of two projects. The funding includes $710,000 to expand a program called the Nature Exchange ...
NASA engineers have turned off one of Voyager 2's science instruments due to dwindling power supplies on the spacecraft as it explores interstellar space. Voyager 2 launched into space on Aug. 20 ...
He sat down recently to discuss his new book, "The Road to Wisdom: On Truth, Science, Faith ... And yet, at the same time, Genesis 1 and 2 talks about the special relationship that God has ...
The National Council of Educational Research and Training (NCERT) has released a revised edition of its Class 6 science textbook ... For instance, Chapter 2, “Diversity in the Living World ...
Last year, a high-level committee formed by the NCERT to revise the social science curriculum had recommended that “India” should be replaced by “Bharat” in all textbooks. The older ...
You can get in touch with Mandy via email: m.taheri@newsweek.com. Languages: English, French Ken Miller, a science textbook author and a professor emeritus of biology at Brown University ...
So, in no particular order, here they are: New Scientist’s favourite science fiction books of all time. We’d love to hear from readers, too, about your own favourite sci-fi. Join the ...