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Showing 511 to 525 of 734 results Save | Export
Reynolds, V. – Biology and Human Affairs, 1979
Outlines and discusses characteristics of an ethological perspective on mental illness, which emphasizes the evolutionary background of humanity, his recent background since the agricultural and industrial revolutions, and the physiological and psychosomatic factors of the human species in dealing with stress. (CS)
Descriptors: Anthropology, Biology, Evolution, Higher Education
Gamkrelidze, Thomas V.; Ivanov, V. V. – Scientific American, 1990
The relationship between Eastern and Western languages is explored. Possible origins and the spread of language over the Eurasian land mass are discussed. (CW)
Descriptors: Evolution, Indo European Languages, Language Patterns, Language Universals
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Pearson, Lorentz C. – American Biology Teacher, 1988
Summarizes recent findings that help in understanding how evolution has brought about the diversity of plant life that presently exists. Discusses basic concepts of evolution, diversity and classification, the three-line hypothesis of plant evolution, the origin of fungi, and the geologic time table. Included are 31 references. (CW)
Descriptors: Biological Sciences, Botany, Classification, College Science
Parker, Franklin; Parker, Betty – National Forum: Phi Kappa Phi Journal, 1988
People for the American Way, a civil liberties organization that monitors censorship, found fundamentalists more active, better organized, more emboldened, and more sophisticated in their censorship attacks. They are increasingly intimidating school boards, and their focused harassment has increasingly frightened publishers into removing…
Descriptors: Censorship, Court Litigation, Creationism, Evolution
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Porter, John R. – American Biology Teacher, 1988
Demonstrates the magnitude of an extinction event by using a simulation to illustrate the massive nature of the loss of a family and the number of species that perish to achieve that result. (RT)
Descriptors: Biological Sciences, Biology, Ecology, Evolution
Badash, Lawrence – Scientific American, 1989
Summarizes the development of the Earth's age calculation including the work of Archbishop Ussher, James Hutton, Lord Kelvin, Ernest Rutherford, Bertram Boltwood, and Arthur Holmes. Describes the changes in radioisotope dating methods. (YP)
Descriptors: Evolution, Geology, Paleontology, Physics
Wheeler, David L. – Chronicle of Higher Education, 1994
In artificial life research, scientists use the principles of evolution to develop complex behaviors from simple elements. By creating lifelike processes, they are trying to understand real organisms and explore possibilities for life in other circumstances. Techniques used are diverse, including biological testing, robotics, and computer…
Descriptors: Computer Oriented Programs, Evolution, Higher Education, Mathematical Formulas
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Lach, Michael; Loverude, Michael – American Biology Teacher, 1998
Presents a series of simple and inexpensive hands-on activities with a host of extension lesson ideas that can be used to actively introduce students to the scientific theory of evolution. Lessons are designed to thwart common student difficulties. Classes are structured around a predator-prey simulation game that creates a springboard for…
Descriptors: Biology, Educational Games, Evolution, Group Activities
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Stewart, James; Rudolph, John L. – Science Education, 2001
Describes the nature and existence of both model-data fit and conceptual problems in science, then examines two curricular projects--one in genetics and one in evolutionary biology--that attempt to integrate these problems into classroom instruction. (Author/SAH)
Descriptors: Concept Formation, Curriculum Development, Educational Change, Evolution
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Geary, David C.; Bjorklund, David F. – Child Development, 2000
Describes evolutionary developmental psychology as the study of the genetic and ecological mechanisms that govern the development of social and cognitive competencies common to all human beings and the epigenetic (gene-environment interactions) processes that adapt these competencies to local conditions. Outlines basic assumptions and domains of…
Descriptors: Cognitive Development, Competence, Developmental Psychology, Evolution
Cooke, Bernard N. – Australian Science Teachers' Journal, 1999
Describes a new hypothesis regarding the origin of bulungamayine kangaroos. Suggests that this group of Oglio-Miocene kangaroos independently evolved adaptations for herbivory and are likely to be ancestral to modern and recently extinct plant-eating kangaroos. (Contains 17 references.) (Author/WRM)
Descriptors: Animals, Biology, Evolution, Foreign Countries
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Tuimala, Jarno – Biochemistry and Molecular Biology Education, 2006
A bioinformatics laboratory exercise based on inherited human morphological traits is presented. It teaches how morphological characters can be used to study the evolutionary history of humans using parsimony. The exercise can easily be used in a pen-and-paper laboratory, but if computers are available, a more versatile analysis can be carried…
Descriptors: Majors (Students), Science Laboratories, Evolution, Science Instruction
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Scalice, Daniella; Wilmoth, Krisstina – Science Teacher, 2004
Life as people know it here on Earth exchanges energy and materials with the environment. Life forms grow, develop, produce waste products, and reproduce, storing genetic information in DNA and RNA and passing it from one generation to the next. Life evolves, adapting to changes in the environment and changing the environment in return. The basic…
Descriptors: Energy, Environmental Influences, Molecular Structure, Molecular Biology
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Berkson, Gershon – Mental Retardation: A Journal of Practices, Policy and Perspectives, 2004
This paper is focused on three basic questions: The first concerns when specific disabilities first appeared during human evolution. The second question has to do with causes of disabilities. The third question concerns social responses to people with disabilities. Discussions on each of the issues are presented.
Descriptors: Physical Disabilities, Evolution, Mental Retardation, Etiology
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Smedley, Audrey – American Psychologist, 2006
In this article, the author responds to M. J. Zyphur's comments on the original article by A. Smedley and B. D. Smedley. Race, as people live and understand it, inhabits a dimension of reality that transcends biology and cannot be reduced to genes, chromosomes, or even phenotypes. A biological or genetic view of race cannot encompass the lived…
Descriptors: Race, Genetics, Biodiversity, Evolution
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