Ask a room full of Year 4 students what they want to learn about, and space will come up within about thirty seconds. There’s something about the vastness, the danger, and the sheer strangeness of it that captures children’s imaginations in a way few other topics can. Smart teachers have always known this. The trick is using that fascination to drive learning in science, computing, and engineering.
Why Space Works as a STEM Hook
Space exploration is inherently interdisciplinary. Getting a rocket off the ground involves physics, mathematics, materials science, computing, and engineering. Keeping astronauts alive requires biology, chemistry, and medicine. Exploring other planets demands robotics and artificial intelligence. There is almost no area of STEM that doesn’t connect to space in some meaningful way.
More importantly, space makes abstract concepts tangible. Gravity isn’t just a formula — it’s the reason astronauts float. Programming isn’t just typing commands — it’s how we steer a rover on Mars from 225 million kilometres away. For children who struggle to see the point of what they’re learning, space provides the “why.”
Practical Ways to Use Space in Your Lessons
Coding and Robotics
Frame programming challenges as space missions. Instead of “program the robot to navigate the course,” try “your rover has landed on Mars and needs to reach the sample collection site while avoiding craters.” Same skills, completely different level of engagement. Our drone workshops use space-themed inspection missions for exactly this reason.
Science Investigations
Rocket-building is an obvious one, but the science goes deeper. Test materials for heat resistance (re-entry shielding), investigate how plants grow without soil (space station agriculture), or explore how sound behaves differently in different atmospheres. Each investigation covers curriculum content while feeling like genuine exploration.
Design and Technology
Challenge students to design a habitat for the Moon or Mars. What materials would they use? How would they provide air, water, and food? How would they protect against radiation? This kind of open-ended design challenge hits every D&T objective while letting students be genuinely creative.
Cross-Curricular Opportunities
Space doesn’t have to stay in science lessons. The history of the space race, the geography of launch sites, the persuasive writing required to justify a mission budget, the art of designing mission patches — a space theme can run across your entire curriculum for a half-term and still feel fresh.
Making It Stick
The best space-themed STEM teaching does more than motivate in the moment. It shows students that the skills they’re learning have real-world applications and that the people working in space today started exactly where they are now. Browse our full range of STEM workshops to see how we use real-world contexts, including space, to make computing and engineering genuinely exciting for young people.




