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Showing 1 to 15 of 25 results Save | Export
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Henrietta Weinberg; Florian Müller; Rouwen Cañal-Bruland – Cognitive Research: Principles and Implications, 2025
Due to severe time constraints, goalkeepers regularly face the challenging task to make decisions within just a few hundred milliseconds. A key finding of anticipation research is that experts outperform novices by using advanced cues which can be derived from either kinematic or contextual information. Yet, how context modulates decision-making…
Descriptors: Cues, Athletics, Decision Making, Specialists
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Aji, Mahardika Prasetya; Rahmawati, Ita; Imtinan, Nisrina; Wulandari, Yuvita Kiki; Yusmantoro; Priyanto, Aan – Physics Education, 2022
The momentum is often used to analyse the dynamics of the motion of an experimental interaction between objects. Meanwhile, the interaction force tends to be challenging to observe and obtain. In this study, a simple video-assisted experiment was used to observe the interaction forces during the interaction of two magnetic objects. The interaction…
Descriptors: Science Instruction, Mechanics (Physics), Motion, Science Experiments
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Arlene A. Russell; Jennifer R. Casey; Kristopher K. Barr – Journal of Chemical Education, 2023
We report here a successful adaptation of lab videos used during remote instruction to a kinetics experiment reported in this Journal in 2007. In the in-person lab, students now record their rate data on their cell phone cameras and then collect their data from the videos for their postlab reports; previously, they acquired the data in real time…
Descriptors: Chemistry, College Freshmen, College Science, Laboratory Experiments
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Trisha M. Gomez; Charmaine Luciano; Tam Nguyen; Sachel M. Villafañe; Michael N. Groves – Chemistry Education Research and Practice, 2025
A flipped classroom is typically one where some of the instruction occurs asynchronously prior to the scheduled synchronous meeting between students and the instructor. Since 2000, they have gained substantial popularity especially in STEM fields where they have been shown to have increased exam scores and reduce the number of students who fail.…
Descriptors: Flipped Classroom, Student Experience, Science Education, Chemistry
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Aichinger, Philipp; Kumar, S. Pravin; Lehoux, Hugo; Švec, Jan G. – Journal of Speech, Language, and Hearing Research, 2022
Purpose: Laryngeal high-speed videoendoscopy (LHSV) has been recognized as a highly valuable modality for the scientific investigations of vocal fold (VF) vibrations. In contrast to stroboscopic imaging, LHSV enables visualizing aperiodic VF vibrations. However, the technique is less well established in the clinical care of disordered voices,…
Descriptors: Speech Impairments, Video Technology, Acoustics, Phonetics
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Cross, Rod – Physics Education, 2021
The vertical bounce of a plastic egg was investigated by dropping the egg on a horizontal surface and filming the result with a video camera. If the egg is dropped on one end then it bounces just like a spherical ball. If the top end of the egg is pointing forwards or backwards when it lands on the surface, or if the egg is spinning when it lands,…
Descriptors: Science Instruction, Motion, Kinetics, Science Experiments
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Falconer, John L.; Hendren, Neil – Chemical Engineering Education, 2021
A virtual catalytic reactor laboratory (VCRL) experiment, which can be used in most browsers, is described. Students select feed conditions and use the VCRL to take data for a gas-phase catalytic reaction and fit kinetic parameters to a Langmuir-Hinshelwood rate expression. The VCRL contains instructions, equipment descriptions, an animated…
Descriptors: Science Instruction, Computer Simulation, Laboratory Experiments, Laboratory Equipment
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Gössling, Alexander; Becker, Sebastian; Kuhn, Jochen – Physics Teacher, 2021
Supersonic free-fall jumps are excellent examples of kinematics in the context of drag. They have attracted a lot of media, public, and scientific interest. In 2012, Felix Baumgartner jumped from a height of approximately 38.969 km. During his flight he reached a top speed of 373 m/s, becoming the first human to travel faster than the speed of…
Descriptors: Science Instruction, Science Experiments, Physics, Kinetics
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Rodrigues Ventura, Daniel; Simeão de Carvalho, Paulo; Adriano Dias, Marco – Physics Teacher, 2017
The word "wave" is part of the daily language of every student. However, the physical understanding of the concept demands a high level of abstract thought. In physics, waves are oscillating variations of a physical quantity that involve the transfer of energy from one point to another, without displacement of matter. A wave can be…
Descriptors: Video Technology, Teaching Methods, Physics, Scientific Concepts
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Becker, Sebastian; Thees, Michael; Kuhn, Jochen – Physics Teacher, 2018
A magnetic linear accelerator (or Gauss accelerator) is a device that uses the conversion of magnetic energy into kinetic energy to launch an object with high velocity. A simple experimental implementation consists of a line of steel spheres in which the first one is a permanent magnetic sphere. If another steel ball collides with the magnetic…
Descriptors: Equipment, Magnets, Energy, Kinetics
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Craig, Erin M.; Galbreath, Sydney; Sorey, Timothy; Ricketson, Derek – Journal of College Science Teaching, 2022
A growing number of Introductory Physics for Life Sciences courses have been developed to prepare biology, premedicine, and prehealth majors for cross-disciplinary connections between physical principles and biological systems. Many students find it challenging to apply idealized algebra-based general physics to more complex biological systems. A…
Descriptors: Case Studies, Biology, Science Instruction, Metabolism
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Cross, Rod – Physics Teacher, 2016
The nature of the drag force on an object moving through a fluid is well documented and many experiments have been described to allow students to measure the force. For low speed flows the drag force is proportional to the velocity of the object, while at high flow speeds the drag force is proportional to the velocity squared. The basic physics…
Descriptors: Motion, Kinetics, Physics, Scientific Methodology
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Cen, Xinqiao – Journal of Language and Linguistic Studies, 2022
Since the establishment and development of translation and interpreting discipline in universities around the world, interpreting contests are held to (1) raise wild interests in interpreting activities; (2) promote interpreting training programs and interpreting pedagogy research; and (3) enhance individual's language proficiency and interpreting…
Descriptors: Translation, Chinese, English (Second Language), Second Language Learning
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Kapucu, Serkan – Physics Education, 2017
This study aims to demonstrate how the average speed of a light-emitting toy car may be determined using a smartphone's light sensor. The freely available Android smartphone application, "AndroSensor," was used for the experiment. The classroom experiment combines complementary physics knowledge of optics and kinematics to find the…
Descriptors: Toys, Telecommunications, Handheld Devices, Educational Technology
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Shakur, Asif – Physics Teacher, 2015
A science video blog, which has gone viral, shows a wooden block shot by a vertically aimed rifle. The video shows that the block hit dead center goes exactly as high as the one shot off-center. (Fig. 1). The puzzle is that the block shot off-center carries rotational kinetic energy in addition to the gravitational potential energy. This leads a…
Descriptors: Science Instruction, Video Technology, Scientific Concepts, Energy
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