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Cohen, Joel I. – Journal of Education, 2023
Naturalists enrich our scientific understanding of biodiversity. However, just as countries have fallen behind on commitments to provide biodiversity conservation funding, so has the focus of life science stayed arm's length. The purpose of this article is to consider why biodiversity should be the center of life sciences education and how…
Descriptors: Biology, Science Instruction, Biodiversity, Teaching Methods
Allen, Kathleen – NAMTA Journal, 2018
Kathleen Allen's reverence for the stories of women naturalists spanning from the seventeenth through the twentieth centuries, and their parallel scientific interest in the documentation of life cycles through art and narratives, gives support to the child in history and nature that is so central to Montessori formal research and discipline. The…
Descriptors: Females, Environment, Scientists, History
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Vandervoort, Frances S. – American Biology Teacher, 2013
Oscar Riddle, born in Indiana in 1877, was an ardent evolutionist and a key player in the founding of the National Association of Biology Teachers in 1938. He studied heredity and behavior in domestic pigeons and doves with Charles O. Whitman of the University of Chicago, received his Ph.D. in zoology in 1907, and in 1912 began a long career at…
Descriptors: Scientists, Evolution, Genetics, Animals
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Gluckman, Peter D.; Beedle, Alan S. – Developmental Psychology, 2012
The application of evolutionary thinking to human physical and psychological medicine suggests several pathways through which evolutionary processes affect risk of disease. Among these is the concept of mismatch between an individual and its environment, either because the environment has changed for the whole species ("evolutionary novelty") or…
Descriptors: Psychopathology, Evolution, Biographies, Diseases
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Bugental, Daphne Blunt – Developmental Psychology, 2012
Children's physiological reactions to stress are presented from the broader theoretical perspective of adaptive calibration to the environment, as rooted in life history theory. Del Giudice, Hinnant, Ellis, and El-Sheikh (2012) focus on children's physiological responses to a stressful task as a consequence of their history of family stress.…
Descriptors: Adolescents, Anatomy, Biographies, Intervention
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American Psychologist, 2012
Presents a short biography of one of the winners of the American Psychological Association's Award for Distinguished Scientific Early Career Contributions to Psychology (2012). Thomas L. Griffiths won the award for bringing mathematical precision to the deepest questions in human learning, reasoning, and concept formation. In his pioneering work,…
Descriptors: Concept Formation, Recognition (Achievement), Psychology, Cognitive Development
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American Psychologist, 2012
Presents a short biography of one of the winners of the American Psychological Association's Award for Distinguished Scientific Early Career Contributions to Psychology. The 2012 winner is Laurie R. Santos for creative and insightful investigations of cognition across a broad range of species and psychological domains, illuminating cognitive…
Descriptors: Recognition (Achievement), Animal Behavior, Developmental Psychology, Social Psychology
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Cooke, Bill – Science & Education, 2010
Joseph McCabe (1867-1955) was one of the most prolific and gifted polymaths of the twentieth century. Long before such a thing was thought respectable, and almost a century before any university established a chair in the public understanding of science, McCabe made a living as a populariser of science and a critic of philosophical and religious…
Descriptors: Evolution, Science and Society, Religion, Criticism
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Lee, James J. – Intelligence, 2007
This article proposes that a complete account of cognitive evolution may have to accommodate a domain-general source of variance in mental abilities accounting for differences among primate taxa. Deaner, van Schaik, and Johnson [Deaner, R.O., van Schaik, C.P. and Johnson, V.E. (2006). Do some taxa have better domain-general cognition than others?…
Descriptors: Primatology, Cognitive Ability, Biographies, Brain
Sis, Peter – Teaching Pre K-8, 2004
In this article, the author shares some of the background material that did not make it into his biography of Charles Darwin, "The Tree of Life." Specifically, he discusses the important role that teachers played in Darwin's life, from his demanding father (Dr. Darwin) to zoologist Dr. Robert Grant and taxidermist John Edmonstone (a freed slave).
Descriptors: Biographies, Scientists, Teacher Influence, Philosophy
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Baumel, Howard B. – Science Teacher, 1976
Gives highlights of the life of Alfred Wallace, co-developer with Charles Darwin of the theory of natural selection. (LS)
Descriptors: Biographies, Biology, Evolution, Science Education
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Moon, Thomas C – Science Education, 1971
Descriptors: Biographies, Biological Sciences, European History, Evolution
Sapp, Gregg – Library Journal, 1994
Provides an annotated bibliography of the 39 best science and technology books from 1993 in the areas of animal life, astronomy, biography, chemistry, earth science, environmental sciences, evolution, mathematics, medical sciences, natural history, paleontology, philosophy of science, physics, psychology, general science, and technology. Ethical…
Descriptors: Animals, Annotated Bibliographies, Astronomy, Biographies