For young engineers and scientists that want to get their hands dirty (or don't have a laptop or don't want to do science on a laptop) there's the tried and true book-variety of science experiments.
Just keep an eye on the kids while they're experimenting. It's a fun read, but it includes experiments like "how to cut glass tubes", "making chlorine in the home lab", "making sulfuric acid"...
"Many of the experiments contained in the book are now considered highly dangerous for unsupervised children, and would not appear in a modern children's chemistry book. OCLC lists only 126 copies of this book in libraries worldwide. It was said that the experiments and information contained herein were too dangerous for the general public."
It's still under copyright. The Internet Archive owns a physical copy of the book, which they have scanned, and if you believe in Controlled Digital Lending ( https://controlleddigitallending.org -- to be clear, I do) this permits them to lend a copy out online to one person at a time.
I see a bit of measurement, but nothing that looks like an experiment; e.g.: observe, think, predict, test, iterate.
Need to dig out the link, but there's a video of a British biologist from a few years ago, talking about how today's university students are completely unable to do any actual science.
All they know how to do is reference "peer-reviewed" (meaning total nonsense) papers to "prove" things.
For what it's worth, my undergraduate experience was that we had very few opportunities to do any actual empirical* research in most disciplines.
Most of the "research" positions available were just grunt work, and even in cases where we had the opportunity to perform some independent research, often we had to use relatively unreliable methodologies because the more robust ones required more resources than we had access to.
I also found that a lot of hard science students didn't understand the statistical methods they were applying very well, but that's a different can of worms.
* "Empirical" is a pretty big caveat here — I know some math majors that had the opportunity to carry out some substantive research, and I imagine the same goes for other disciplines that don't rely as heavily on labor-intensive (or capital-intensive, or both) data collection.
These well meaning sort of things are nice but completely miss the point.
Were you pushed, coerced, encouraged, fancied a go, bloody minded or all of the above. There is the concept of the "self starter" - someone who simply does exactly what you think they should. There's the bloody minded ones who simply don't conform.
People are people. No more and no less. Children can be guided and sometimes you get it right. My uncle made a suggestion 35 odd years ago about me looking into Civil Engineering and I ended up running an IT company for the last 22 years.
Loved (still love) this classic put together by UNESCO: https://archive.org/details/isbn_9780385052757