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Showing 1 to 15 of 102 results Save | Export
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Taksina Sreelohor; Sarawut Jakpeng; Sumalee Chaijaroen – Journal of Education and Learning, 2025
This study aims to develop and validate a Constructivist Learning Environment Model to address secondary students' misconceptions in learning Science. Employing a Design and Development approach (Richey & Klein, 2007), the research is conducted in two phases. Phase 1 focuses on model design, drawing from an extensive literature review to…
Descriptors: Constructivism (Learning), Science Education, Scientific Concepts, Misconceptions
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Bardapurkar, Abhijeet – Contemporary Education Dialogue, 2023
The canvas of science education needs to be viewed in its totality to prevent the confounding of some basic issues and to enable us to evaluate the fads and fashions in educational practice. Policies and processes in education are tacitly shaped by theories in the humanities and social sciences. Inadequate understanding of these theories, or the…
Descriptors: Science Education, Educational Practices, Pedagogical Content Knowledge, Educational Policy
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Kotul'akova, Katarina – Chemistry Education Research and Practice, 2020
Today, science education demands preparation of scientifically literate people, emphasizing more the process of working with information than owning it. Such a task requires a deep understanding of pedagogical content knowledge by science teachers. This study focuses on revealing the beliefs of prospective chemistry teachers during their teaching…
Descriptors: Preservice Teachers, Student Attitudes, Science Teachers, Chemistry
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Merricks, Jessica; Lankford, Deanna – Science and Children, 2019
For some elementary science teachers, a unit on land and water brings nightmares of dirt and water all over the room. Several Earth science "kits" contain hands-on exercises that allow the students to "get messy" as they manipulate materials; however, these lessons may lack the necessary opportunities for students to ask unique…
Descriptors: Elementary School Science, Elementary School Students, Science Education, Relevance (Education)
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Niebert, Kai; Gropengiesser, Harald – International Journal of Science Education, 2015
In recent years, researchers have become aware of the experiential grounding of scientific thought. Accordingly, research has shown that metaphorical mappings between experience-based source domains and abstract target domains are omnipresent in everyday and scientific language. The theory of conceptual metaphor explains these findings based on…
Descriptors: Figurative Language, Science Instruction, Science Education, Epistemology
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Khanam, Wahidun N.; Kalman, Calvin S. – Canadian Journal for the Scholarship of Teaching and Learning, 2017
It has been argued that for novice students to acquire a full understanding of scientific texts, they also need to pursue a recurrent construction of their comprehension of scientific concepts. The course dossier method has students examine concepts in multiple passes: (a) through reflective writing on text before it is considered in the…
Descriptors: Undergraduate Students, Teaching Methods, Science Education, Physics
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Li, Ming-Chaun; Tsai, Chin-Chung – Journal of Science Education and Technology, 2013
The purpose of this study is to review empirical research articles regarding game-based science learning (GBSL) published from 2000 to 2011. Thirty-one articles were identified through the Web of Science and SCOPUS databases. A qualitative content analysis technique was adopted to analyze the research purposes and designs, game design and…
Descriptors: Educational Games, Teaching Methods, Literature Reviews, Science Education
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Gilbert, John K.; Bulte, Astrid M. W.; Pilot, Albert – International Journal of Science Education, 2011
"Context-based courses" are increasingly used in an address to the major challenges that science education currently faces: lack of clear purpose, content overload, incoherent learning by students, lack of relevance to students, and lack of transfer of learning to new contexts. In this paper, four criteria for the design of context-based courses…
Descriptors: Transfer of Training, Concept Formation, Science Education, Instructional Design
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Zhou, George – EURASIA Journal of Mathematics, Science & Technology Education, 2010
Learning is a process of knowledge construction, individually and socially. It has both rational and irrational features. From this stance, the paper reviews an earlier model of conceptual change and its related pedagogical interventions for their inadequate attention to the irrational and social dimensions of learning. More recent developments in…
Descriptors: Concept Formation, Cultural Influences, Teaching Methods, Constructivism (Learning)
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Roth, Wolff-Michael – Educational Research Review, 2008
Over the past three decades, the literature in science education has accumulated a tremendous amount of research on students' conceptions--one bibliography currently lists 7000 entries concerning students' and teachers' conceptions and science education. Yet despite all of this research and all the advances in the associated conceptual change…
Descriptors: Constructivism (Learning), Misconceptions, Science Instruction, Science Education
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Fleer, Marilyn – Cultural Studies of Science Education, 2008
"Culturally-Sensitive Schooling" as proposed by Brayboy and Castagno offers an important way of thinking about the relations between formal and informal science learning and between Western and Indigenous science. The constructiveness framework adopted by Brayboy and Castagno in their discussions is consistent with the theoretical approach…
Descriptors: Constructivism (Learning), Informal Education, Concept Formation, Science Education
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Calik, Muammer; Ayas, Alipasa; Ebenezer, Jazlin V. – Research in Science & Technological Education, 2009
The study aims to demonstrate evidence of (a) students' conceptual change on solution rates; (b) students' sub-microscopic explanations of dissolution; and (c) retention of the concepts of solution rates. The sample consists of 44 Grade 9 students (18 boys and 26 girls) drawn purposively from two different classes (22 each) in the city of Trabzon,…
Descriptors: Constructivism (Learning), Logical Thinking, Concept Formation, Foreign Countries
Marek, Edmund A. – Journal of Elementary Science Education, 2008
The learning cycle is a way to structure inquiry in school science and occurs in several sequential phases. A learning cycle moves children through a scientific investigation by having them first explore materials, then construct a concept, and finally apply or extend the concept to other situations. Why the learning cycle? Because it is a…
Descriptors: Learning Processes, Science Education, Elementary School Science, Sequential Learning
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Ketpichainarong, Watcharee; Panijpan, Bhinyo; Ruenwongsa, Pintip – International Journal of Environmental and Science Education, 2010
This study explored the effectiveness of an inquiry-based cellulase laboratory unit in promoting inquiry in undergraduate students in biotechnology. The following tools were used to assess the students' achievements and attitude: conceptual understanding test, concept mapping, students' documents, CLES questionnaire, students' self reflection, and…
Descriptors: Concept Mapping, Undergraduate Students, Test Results, Science Laboratories
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Johnson, Philip – International Journal of Science Education, 2000
Considers substance identity and pupils' interaction with the scientific idea of melting and boiling behavior as a means for identification and assessment of purity. Presents evidence that suggests that children do not naturally have a concept of substance identity that allows them to recognize chemical change as a possibility. (Contains 31…
Descriptors: Chemistry, Concept Formation, Constructivism (Learning), Piagetian Theory
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