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Showing all 8 results Save | Export
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Wallee Naimi; Gail A. Vinnacombe-Willson; Stanley Saldana; Lionnel Ronduen; Heather Domjan; Naihao Chiang – Journal of Chemical Education, 2024
Stimulating interest in science at an early age is important for STEM education. This work details an educational activity utilizing the anthocyanins found in butterfly pea flowers ("Clitoria ternatea"). This activity was developed for use in official classroom settings, online, and/or at-home with parental or educator guidance. Primary…
Descriptors: Science Instruction, Chemistry, STEM Education, Fundamental Concepts
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Siry, Christina; Gorges, Anna – International Journal of Science Education, 2020
This manuscript elaborates the value of looking beyond the written and spoken word in science education research and practice at the early childhood level. We examine one plurilingual child's descriptions of a science activity to explore the "diversity of resources" that she used while expressing her understandings of a sound…
Descriptors: Multilingualism, Science Instruction, Nonverbal Communication, Freehand Drawing
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Rennie, Richard – Teaching Science, 2015
The Australian Curriculum: Science for Year 5 includes "recognising that the colour of an object depends on the properties of the object and the color of the light source". This article shows how much more can be done with color in the science laboratory. Activities include using a prism to explore white light, using a hand lens to…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Science Experiments, Science Activities, Color
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Yurumezoglu, Kemal; Isik, Hakan; Arikan, Gizem; Kabay, Gozde – Physics Education, 2015
This paper presents an experimental activity based on the absorption of light colours by pigments. The activity is constructed using a stepwise design and offers an opportunity for students and teachers to compare and generalize the interactions between light and pigment colours. The light colours composing an artificial rainbow produced in the…
Descriptors: Physics, Light, Color, Science Experiments
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Garber, Kathleen C. A.; Odendaal, Antoinette Y.; Carlson, Erin E. – Journal of Chemical Education, 2013
Anthocyanins are a class of pigments responsible for the bright colors of many flowers, fruits, and vegetables typically resulting in shades of red, blue, and purple. Students were asked to perform an activity to enable them to identify which anthocyanin was present in one of several possible plant materials through a hands-on activity. Students…
Descriptors: Science Instruction, Chemistry, Outreach Programs, Inquiry
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Yurumezoglu, Kemal; Oguz-Unver, Ayse – Science Activities: Classroom Projects and Curriculum Ideas, 2011
"Why are the seas blue?" is a huge question that may reach far beyond the middle school level. However, our objective is to bring "simple" tools into the classroom to explain science without tampering with its essence and complexity. The experiment described in this article is only concerned with teaching the subject of absorption as related to…
Descriptors: Elementary Schools, Middle Schools, Science Instruction, Light
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Weinberg, Richard B.; Muyskens, Mark – Journal of Chemical Education, 2007
Clock reactions based upon competing oxidation and reduction reactions of iodine and starch as the most popular type of chemistry example is presented to illustrate the redox phenomena, reaction kinetics, and principles of chemical titration. The examination of the photophysical principles underlying the iodine fluorescence quenching clock…
Descriptors: Kinetics, Chemistry, Demonstrations (Educational), Science Instruction
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Texley, Juliana – Science and Children, 2005
Colors are powerful tools for engaging children, from the youngest years onward. We hang brightly patterned mobiles above their cribs and help them learn the names of colors as they begin to record their own ideas in pictures and words. Colors can also open the door to an invisible world of electromagnetism, even when children can barely imagine…
Descriptors: Color, Plants (Botany), Science Education, Science Activities