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Froehle, Peter; Miller, Charles H. – Physics Teacher, 2012
An interesting, quick, and inexpensive lab that we do with our students is to tape one end of a string just less than halfway around the back side of a uniform solid cylinder m[subscript 1] and attach the other end of the string to a mass m[subscript 2] that is below a pulley (Fig. 1). Data can be collected using either an Ultra Pulley (Fig. 2) or…
Descriptors: Energy, Misconceptions, Conservation (Concept), Laboratory Experiments
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Tomasik, Janice Hall; Cottone, Katelyn E.; Heethuis, Mitchell T.; Mueller, Anja – Journal of Chemical Education, 2013
Incorporating research-based lab activities into general chemistry at a large university can be challenging, considering the high enrollments and costs typically associated with the courses. Performing sweeping curricular overhauls of the general chemistry laboratory can be difficult, and in some cases discouraged, as many would rather maintain…
Descriptors: Science Instruction, College Science, Undergraduate Study, Chemistry
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LaFratta, Christopher N.; Jain, Swapan; Pelse, Ian; Simoska, Olja; Elvy, Karina – Journal of Chemical Education, 2013
The purpose of this experiment was to create a simple and inexpensive flame photometer to measure the concentration of sodium in beverages, such as Gatorade. We created a nebulizer using small tubing and sprayed the sample into the base of a Bunsen burner. Adjacent to the flame was a photodiode with a filter specific for the emission of the sodium…
Descriptors: Science Instruction, College Science, Middle Schools, Secondary School Science
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Niece, Brian K.; Hauri, James F. – Journal of Chemical Education, 2013
Mercury is a known neurotoxin that is particularly harmful to children and unborn fetuses. Consumption of contaminated fish is one major route of mercury exposure. This laboratory experiment gives students an opportunity to measure mercury concentrations in store-bought seafood and compare the results to suggested exposure limits. The U.S.…
Descriptors: Pollution, Chemistry, Science Instruction, College Science
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Simpson, Scott; Lonie, David C.; Chen, Jiechen; Zurek, Eva – Journal of Chemical Education, 2013
A computational experiment that investigates single-walled carbon nanotubes (SWNTs) has been developed and employed in an upper-level undergraduate physical chemistry laboratory course. Computations were carried out to determine the electronic structure, radial breathing modes, and the influence of the nanotube's diameter on the…
Descriptors: Science Instruction, College Science, Chemistry, Computer Uses in Education
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Lieberherr, Martin – Physics Teacher, 2013
Every instructor should know some easy examples of anharmonic oscillations. The rocking of an empty wine bottle or a slender beer glass is one of those: The angle is not a sinusoidal function of time and the period is not independent of the amplitude, not even for small amplitudes. But care has to be taken that the glass does not slip or rotate…
Descriptors: Science Instruction, Physics, Scientific Concepts, Motion
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Miles, Deon T. – Journal of Chemical Education, 2013
Electrochemistry is a significant area of analytical chemistry encompassing electrical measurements of chemical systems. The applications associated with electrochemistry appear in many aspects of everyday life: explaining how batteries work, how the human nervous system functions, and how metal corrosion occurs. The most common electrochemical…
Descriptors: Mnemonics, Chemistry, Science Instruction, College Science
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Wood, Deborah; Sebranek, John – Physics Teacher, 2013
In April 1820, Hans Christian Ørsted noticed that the needle of a nearby compass deflected briefly from magnetic north each time the electric current of the battery he was using for an unrelated experiment was turned on or off. Upon further investigation, he showed that an electric current flowing through a wire produces a magnetic field. In 1831…
Descriptors: Magnets, Electronics, Science Experiments, Science Instruction
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Vollmer, Michael; Mollmann, Klaus-Peter – Physics Teacher, 2013
In nature, water drops can have a large variety of sizes and shapes. Small droplets with diameters of the order of 5 to 10 µm are present in fog and clouds. This is not sufficiently large for gravity to dominate their behavior. In contrast, raindrops typically have sizes of the order of 1 mm, with observed maximum sizes in nature of around 5 mm in…
Descriptors: Science Instruction, Water, Science Experiments, Physics
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Blumenthal, Jack; Bradvica, Rafaela; Karl, Katherine – Physics Teacher, 2013
In a recent paper, Zable described an experiment with a near-spherical balloon filled with impure helium. Measuring the temperature and the pressure inside and outside the balloon, the lift of the balloon, and the mass of the balloon materials, he described how to use the ideal gas laws and Archimedes' principal to compute the average molecular…
Descriptors: Scientific Concepts, Physics, Accuracy, Measurement
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Zavrel, Erik; Sharpsteen, Eric – Physics Teacher, 2016
The importance of understanding and internalizing the scientific method can hardly be exaggerated. Unfortunately, it is all too common for high school--and even university--students to graduate with only a partial or oversimplified understanding of what the scientific method is and how to actually employ it. Help in remedying this situation may…
Descriptors: Science Instruction, Physics, Scientific Methodology, Science Process Skills
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Johnson, Michele; Dodson, Tiare – Science Teacher, 2016
Carbon is at the heart of many of today's environmental challenges. It is the central element responsible for the structure and function of living systems--taken up by plants through photosynthesis and moving from plants to other organisms, soil, and the ocean and into the atmosphere. The imbalance of these connected biogeochemical…
Descriptors: Climate, Environmental Education, Environmental Influences, Scientific Concepts
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Berman, Abraham; Shvartsman, Ludmila – European Journal of Science and Mathematics Education, 2016
In this paper we describe an experiment in a linear algebra course. The aim of the experiment was to promote the students' understanding of the studied concepts focusing on their definitions. It seems to be a given that students should understand concepts' definitions before working substantially with them. Unfortunately, in many cases they do…
Descriptors: Definitions, Relevance (Education), Algebra, Science Experiments
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Edelmann, Hans G.; Martius, Thilo; Hahn, Achim; Schlüter, Kirsten; Nessler, Stefan H. – School Science Review, 2016
Enquiry learning and teaching about the nature of science (NoS) is a key element of science education. We have designed an experimental setting for students aged 12-14 years to exercise enquiry-learning skills and to introduce students to the NoS aspects of creativity and imagination. It also illustrates the impact of carbon dioxide on the growth…
Descriptors: Scientific Principles, Science Instruction, Teaching Methods, Secondary School Students
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Holmes, N. G.; Wieman, Carl E. – Physical Review Physics Education Research, 2016
While the positive outcomes of undergraduate research experiences (UREs) have been extensively categorized, the mechanisms for those outcomes are less understood. Through lightly structured focus group interviews, we have extracted the cognitive tasks that students identify as engaging in during their UREs. We also use their many comparative…
Descriptors: Undergraduate Study, Physics, Student Research, Focus Groups
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