National Science Week 2026: Blue Seeds of Hope
Our students will explore the "invisible" heroes of our oceans: seagrass and seaweed forests. Guided by the theme "Seeds of Science: Nurturing knowledge for all," students will investigate how marine plants act as climate change warriors through engineering and chemical challenges. This whole school program draws from groundbreaking (UWA) research, which explores how restoring these underwater forests can capture carbon up to 35 times faster than tropical rainforests to help mitigate global warming.
Hands-On Activities:
This project literalises the theme by exploring marine "seeds" while metaphorically planting seeds of stewardship. We "nurture knowledge for all" by transforming complex Blue Carbon science into accessible, hands-on sensory play and high-level engineering. Investigating underwater forests, students grow from curious observers into active scientific contributors.
By connecting students with the cutting-edge Blue Carbon research at UWA, this program replaces climate 'doom' with scientific optimism. Students move beyond passive concern to become active problem-solvers, discovering that through restoration and engineering, we can harness the ocean's natural power to heal the planet. This experience plants 'seeds of hope,' empowering a new generation with the knowledge and confidence that climate change is a challenge we can—and are—successfully meeting.