NGen’s stated goals include: • Foster a culture of curiosity and discovery • Model new holistic ways of approaching learning• Promote positive gender norms• Nurture trust in science• Help families stay safe during the pandemicAccording to an NPR feature, since debuting on Ugandan TV last fall, NGen has been acquired by TV networks in more than half a dozen African countries and premiered February 6 on The Africa Channel, making it available to families in North America and the Caribbean. The show itself, NPR reported, is the brainchild of six teachers from Clarke Junior School in Kampala and Peripheral Vision International, the East African not-for-profit that funds and produces it, and it examines science through a decidedly African prism.“Episode subjects range from astrophysics to biology to the natural sciences,” the NPR article states. “Presenters give short lessons on topics such as bees, robots, sounds, water, and paleontology. They conduct science experiments – how to make a model of an X-ray of their hand using paper and flour, for example. The instructions: Sprinkle flour over the hand on a black piece of paper to create an outline, then place 27 sticks on the paper to represent the 27 bones in the hand.”Season one of N*Gen consists of 13 half-hour episodes. A second season is already in the works. Its timely focus? Issues tied to climate change.