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Corcoran, Mimi – Mathematics Teacher, 2016
Statistics is enjoying some well-deserved limelight across mathematics curricula of late. Some statistical concepts, however, are not especially intuitive, and students struggle to comprehend and apply them. As an AP Statistics teacher, the author appreciates the central limit theorem as a foundational concept that plays a crucial role in…
Descriptors: Statistics, Mathematics Instruction, Mathematical Concepts, Learning Activities
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Arthurs, Seán – Social Education, 2015
How can educators immerse high school students in a real murder case investigation that will require them to draw upon and practice the critical thinking, literacy, and reasoning skill sets so highly valued under the Common Core, the C3 Framework and the 21st Century skills rubric? As an attorney and former high school teacher, the author knew…
Descriptors: High School Students, Social Studies, Learner Engagement, Inquiry
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Barber, Nicholas A. – American Biology Teacher, 2012
I present a framework for ecology and evolution laboratory exercises using artificial caterpillars made from modeling clay. Students generate and test hypotheses about predation rates on caterpillars that differ in appearance or "behavior" to understand how natural selection by predators shapes distribution and physical characteristics of…
Descriptors: Ecology, Physical Characteristics, Science Instruction, Science Laboratories
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Gray, Jennifer B. – Communication Teacher, 2014
The subject of research methods is often unknown, foreboding, and unappealing to undergraduate communication majors. Thus, in the research methods course, two ways to overcome such issues and achieve learning are by: (1) making the unfamiliar more familiar and accessible; and (2) placing abstract knowledge in its useful real-world context. Making…
Descriptors: Research Methodology, Methods Courses, Learning Activities, Research Design
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Nava-Whitehead, Susan M.; Augusto, Kerri W.; Gow, Joan-Beth – Journal of College Science Teaching, 2011
This column provides original articles on innovations in case study teaching, assessment of the method, as well as case studies with teaching notes. In this month's issue the authors describe an interdisciplinary approach to case study teaching that addresses the demand to balance the goals of process and content. The case study, Salem's Secrets…
Descriptors: Interdisciplinary Approach, Case Studies, Teaching Experience, Teaching Methods
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Jones, Dustin L. – Mathematics Teacher, 2009
The author describes an activity where prospective mathematics teachers made hypotheses about the dimensions of a fair cylindrical die and conducted experiments with different cylinders. He also provides a model that estimates the probability that a cylinder would land on the lateral surface, depending on the height and diameter of the cylinder.…
Descriptors: Mathematics Teachers, Probability, Mathematics Instruction, Mathematical Concepts
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Skilton, Paul F.; Forsyth, David; White, Otis J. – Journal of Marketing Education, 2008
Building from research on learning in workplace project teams, the authors work forward from the idea that the principal condition enabling integration learning in student team projects is project complexity. Recognizing the challenges of developing and running complex student projects, the authors extend theory to propose that the experience of…
Descriptors: Assignments, Student Projects, Cooperative Learning, Integrated Activities
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Myller, Niko; Bednarik, Roman; Sutinen, Erkki; Ben-Ari, Mordechai – ACM Transactions on Computing Education, 2009
As collaborative learning in general, and pair programming in particular, has become widely adopted in computer science education, so has the use of pedagogical visualization tools for facilitating collaboration. However, there is little theory on collaborative learning with visualization, and few studies on their effect on each other. We build on…
Descriptors: Computer Science Education, Learning Activities, Visualization, Classification
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Lawton, Leigh – Journal of Statistics Education, 2009
Hypothesis testing is one of the more difficult concepts for students to master in a basic, undergraduate statistics course. Students often are puzzled as to why statisticians simply don't calculate the probability that a hypothesis is true. This article presents an exercise that forces students to lay out on their own a procedure for testing a…
Descriptors: Hypothesis Testing, Probability, Learning Activities, Statistics
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Herringer, Lawrence G. – Teaching of Psychology, 2000
Describes an activity for introductory research methods in which students form a hypothesis regarding a personality difference between Captain Kirk from the original "Star Trek" and Captain Picard from "Star Trek: The Next Generation" and then empirically test the hypothesis by observation of operationally defined behaviors.…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Hypothesis Testing, Learning Activities, Observation
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Smith, Margaret H. – Journal of Statistics Education, 2004
Unless the sample encompasses a substantial portion of the population, the standard error of an estimator depends on the size of the sample, but not the size of the population. This is a crucial statistical insight that students find very counterintuitive. After trying several ways of convincing students of the validity of this principle, I have…
Descriptors: Sample Size, Error of Measurement, Mathematics Instruction, College Mathematics