We believe it’s important to give back to the community and we enjoy creating targeted activities to engage children both at our premises and by visiting schools. By working closely with teaching staff, we are able to focus that support specifically where it is needed through our dedicated outreach programmes. We deliver our activities externally in both schools and colleges. "Lockdown" outreach activityDuring the 2020 summer lockdown period we filmed several lessons for upper primary school children which we uploaded on our YouTube channel and promoted them to local schools. This activity was subsequently noted by the Royal Academy of Engineering and shared with over 2000 schools nationally. Deepika Yadav delivers STEM activites as part of the School of Engineering’s Milne lectures outreach activity programme. Nature nanotechnologyCEF’s unique outreach activities that introduce the nano-world to primary school students were featured in Nature Nanotechnology volume 12, page 832 (2017).Read the article Developing the Young Workforce ScotlandSanthosh Sivasubramani, visited Portobello High School to take part in a STEM speed networking activity hosted by Developing the Young Workforce Scotland. Santhosh used an Avengers End Game analogy to encourage engagement. APRIL and the Tower of TechportAnother initiative for primary school children that we have very much enjoyed working on is the ‘APRIL and the Tower of Techport’ book, delivered by our APRIL AI Hub team. An exciting, inclusive, and accessible resource for young audiences, over 3000 copies of this book have been distributed to over 400 schools across the UK. This project was funded by the Royal Academy of Engineering. Milne Lecture SeriesThemis Prodromakis delivering his inaugural lecture, and the Milne lecture, as Regius Professor of Engineering atthe University of Edinburgh.Read more, and watch the lecture! Lindemann Trust outreach eventCaterina Sbandati and Themis Prodromakis deliver a fun interactive activity “transform into neurons”, exploiting in practice how biological signals are communicated and detected. This activity was part of the Lindemann Trust outreach event at the University of Edinburgh. This article was published on 2025-06-25