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Evans, James P. – American Biology Teacher, 2022
Although unrecognized for his scientific achievements during his life, Gregor Mendel pioneered our modern understanding of the gene, work that shaped the field of genetics and advances in biology and medicine. The field that he set in motion 200 years ago lies at the center of current ethical debates about the future of humanity, the limits of…
Descriptors: Science History, Scientists, Heredity, Genetics
Anthony Lorsbach; Allison Antink Meyer – American Biology Teacher, 2024
This lesson used the correspondence of Charles Darwin as an exploration of nature of science (NOS) in a historical context. Specifically, we used his original correspondence about his "provisional hypothesis" of pangenesis as a novel way to explore a scientist's social community. Darwin's community of friends and colleagues in the…
Descriptors: Scientists, Science History, Preservice Teacher Education, Primary Sources
Olson, Don – Physics Teacher, 2021
Most physics teachers have observed the majestic swings of a monumental pendulum at a science museum and have watched long enough to see the plane of oscillation slowly changing direction as Earth turns. The purpose of Don Olson's article is to describe visits to Paris sites related to Jean Bernard Léon Foucault (1819-1868), with a special focus…
Descriptors: Motion, Mechanics (Physics), Scientists, Laboratory Equipment
Douglas Allchin – American Biology Teacher, 2024
"American Biology Teacher" has published over seven dozen articles relevant to the history of biology in biology teaching. They are cataloged here and indexed by topic. As reflected in this archive, teachers adopt a historical approach for many pragmatic motivations: (1) to engage students, by contextualizing science culturally; (2) to…
Descriptors: Biology, Science History, Science Instruction, Science Teachers
Teleshov, Sergei; Teleshova, Elena – International Baltic Symposium on Science and Technology Education, 2019
It has been 150 years since D.I. Mendeleev formulated the Periodic law and expressed it visually in the form of a table of elements in 1869. As is clearly well known today, Mendeleev's ideas, confirmed by the discovery of the elements he predicted, turned out to be very promising indeed. However, Mendeleev was not the first, nor the only scientist…
Descriptors: Chemistry, Science Instruction, Scientists, Visual Aids
Greenslade, Thomas B., Jr. – Physics Teacher, 2019
Ask a physics person what the name of Robert A. Millikan brings to mind, and most would immediately think of the eponymous experiments that he did with the charge on the electron in the years 1908 to 1913. A few might remember his work, starting in 1914, with the experimental determination of Planck's constant using the photoelectric effect. Few…
Descriptors: College Science, Scientists, Biographies, Physics
Cervellati, Rinaldo; Greco, Emanuela – Journal of Chemical Education, 2017
Oscillating chemical reactions in the homogeneous phase have been studied intensively only since the mid-1960s, but they were known since 1920, having as forerunners the chemist William C. Bray and an "atypical" chemist Alfred J. Lotka. This contribution is the result of a careful reading of their literature and patient research into…
Descriptors: Chemistry, Science History, Scientists, Biographies
Ford, Kenneth W. – Physics Teacher, 2018
Many teachers like to introduce the Bohr atom toward the end of an introductory physics course. This is an excellent idea, given the historic importance of Bohr's 1913 work, which provided the bridge from Planck's quantized interaction of matter and radiation (1900) to the full theory of quantum mechanics (1925-28). Unfortunately, the version of…
Descriptors: Physics, Scientists, Science History, Nuclear Physics
Cherif, Abour H.; Roze, Maris; Movahedzadeh, Farahnaz – Journal of Education and Practice, 2015
This is an account of the three-centuries long journey to the discovery of the link between DNA and the transformation principle of heredity beginning with the discovery of the cell in 1665 and leading up to the 1953 discovery of the genetic code and the structure of DNA. This account also illustrates the way science works and how scientists do…
Descriptors: Genetics, Heredity, Science History, Scientists
Askew, Jennifer; Gray, Ron – Science Teacher, 2016
British scientist John Dalton (1766-1844), French scientist Joseph Louis Gay-Lussac (1778-1850), and Italian scientist Amedeo Avogadro (1776-1856) are familiar to many chemistry students. Such students may understand the importance of Dalton's atomic theory, model how Gay-Lussac's law relates the pressure and the temperature of a gas, and use…
Descriptors: Science Instruction, Chemistry, Molecular Structure, Scientific Concepts
Jamison, Rex L. – Advances in Physiology Education, 2014
Marcello Malpighi discovered the glomerulus that bears his name in the 17th century, but it was not until the middle of the 19th century, in 1842, that William Bowman in London published his studies of the histological structure of the glomerulus and proposed that urine formation begins with glomerular secretion. At nearly the same time in…
Descriptors: Scientists, Science History, Physiology, Human Body
Tucci, Pasquale – Physics Education, 2015
Like several scientists, Isaac Newton has been represented many times over many different periods, and portraits of Newton were often commissioned by the scientist himself. These portraits tell us a lot about the scientist, the artist and the cultural context. This article examines two very different portraits of Newton that were realized more…
Descriptors: Scientists, Science History, Science Instruction, Art History
Kragh, Helge – Science & Education, 2015
For more than a century the notion of a pre-established harmony between the mathematical and physical sciences has played an important role not only in the rhetoric of mathematicians and theoretical physicists, but also as a doctrine guiding much of their research. Strongly mathematized branches of physics, such as the vortex theory of atoms…
Descriptors: Mathematics, Physics, Physical Sciences, Interdisciplinary Approach
Reif-Acherman, Simo´n – Journal of Chemical Education, 2015
The British scientist Augustus Matthiessen (1831-1870) is widely known for his investigations on the influence of temperature on the electric conductivity of metals and alloys. However, his contributions to other areas of science throughout his career are not widely acknowledged. His research on the electrolytic decomposition of metallic salts…
Descriptors: Chemistry, Scientists, Scientific Research, Recognition (Achievement)
Martin, Helen E.; Evans-Gondo, Bonita – Science Teacher, 2013
Helen E. Martin, the author of this article, is a retired National Board Certified Teacher who has been researching Sir Isaac Newton's unpublished manuscripts for over three decades. While researching the work of Newton, a teacher she was mentoring asked for some hands-on activities to study planetary motion. The description of the activity…
Descriptors: Astronomy, Scientists, Cooperation, Science History

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