-
Free Albert Einstein: Eduscape on Energy
Albert Einstein has been arrested by the secret police. You can free him by cracking the code. Solve questions about energy, batteries and circuits and get a piece of the code every time.
This assignment is in line with theme 3 (mighty powerful) of …
Translated by
Interactive exercise (15)Teacher -
Cheapest Chicken: Listening Command
This BookWidget is part of the Pano documentary : Cheapest chicken.
The documentary questions the current practice of fast-growing chickens. The BookWidget is mainly aimed at checking whether the students have followed carefully.
The video is not …
Translated by
Interactive exercise (3)Teacher -
Electricity: Dismantle and bend wire
On the basis of these instructional videos and assignments, the students practice working with wire cutters, dismantling pliers, flat-nose pliers and universal pliers.
Translated by
Downloadable resource (5)Teacher -
Doctor Bibber: VOICE assignment
A STEM engineering assignment. where the students make their own Doctor Shiver Game.
In addition to the step-by-step plan that they can follow independently, an evaluation rubric has also been added.
Translated by
Downloadable resource (13)Teacher -
Starting with innovation in technical and vocational education: Inspiration guide
Do you work in a technical or vocational school and do you have an interesting innovative idea to improve the world of education and the labor market for yourself and your students?
Would you like to pour this into a project but don't know where to …
Translated by
Downloadable resource -
Why does 5G work better than 4G?
The roll-out of the 5G network: China has already started it and the rest of the world is eagerly awaiting it. Only Belgium lags behind. But what is 5G actually? Is it that much faster than 4G? Why is that important? And what actually changes for …
Translated by
Video -
Why don't all cars run on hydrogen yet?
Hydrogen is very light, odorless and non-toxic. In addition, it is an excellent energy carrier, a kind of battery that does not pollute. Why aren't all cars running on hydrogen yet? Chemical engineer Tom Breugelmans (UAntwerp) explains how …
Translated by
Video -
Is bioplastic good for the environment?
Organic, that sounds good for the environment. But is that also true in the case of bioplastic? Is bioplastic good for the environment? Can we actually throw it in the organic waste and even in nature? Or is the story a bit more complex?
Prof. Dr. …
Translated by
Video -
Why isn't there one universal computer programming language?
We all know programming languages like Java and Python, but did you know that there are over 700 of those programming languages? Why isn't there one universal programming language? Wouldn't that be much easier? Prof. dr. Dr Viviane Jonckers (VUB) …
Translated by
Video -
How does a computer learn to think like Beethoven?
Computers can calculate quickly, but they can never approach our genius. Or yes? Computers can already play chess much better than we can and who knows, they may soon compose as well as Beethoven. How does a computer learn all those things? …
Translated by
Video -
How racist and sexist are computers?
Everyone has prejudices. But do computers and smartphones have that too? In this lecture Nathalie Smuha (KU Leuven) dives into the world of discrimination and sexism in algorithms.
Translated by
Video -
Is Whatsapp destroying our sense of language, fwa?
Young people chatting, sometimes it hurts the eyes. What they all type can sometimes barely be called Dutch. Is Whatsapp destroying our sense of language? Sociolinguist Reinhild Vandekerckhove (UAntwerp) delved into the wonderful world of Whatsapp …
Translated by
Video