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Lindsey A. Pleasant; Josie G. Ayers; Catharine C. Whiting; Mary D. Kinkel – HAPS Educator, 2025
This paper describes a renal physiology review activity that can be completed during one class session. The activity is a tactile simulation in which colored beads represent various components of the blood, glomerular filtrate, tubular fluid, and interstitial fluid. Students simulate major functions of the nephron by moving beads between…
Descriptors: Physiology, Class Activities, Science Instruction, Simulation
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J. E. Hall; L. A. Pleasant; M. D. Kinkel – Advances in Physiology Education, 2025
This paper describes a short ion flow activity that can be completed within one lab or lecture session. The activity is focused on the core concept of flow-down gradients and is geared toward undergraduates. No previous knowledge of equilibrium potentials or membrane potentials is required. Students are guided through a set of questions that build…
Descriptors: Active Learning, Class Activities, Undergraduate Students, Cytology
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Angela Bassoli – Journal of Chemical Education, 2024
Organic molecules are invisible objects, but they can be visualized and manipulated by using molecular models. The object-based learning (OBL) approach, which is an educational tool developed for museums and collection items, is tailored and applied to a first-year bachelor course of organic chemistry. At the beginning of the course, each student…
Descriptors: Organic Chemistry, Science Instruction, Undergraduate Study, College Science
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Inmaculada Ortiz Martín; Ángel Del Espino Pérez; Estefanía García Luque; Enrique Viguera Mínguez – Biochemistry and Molecular Biology Education, 2025
The great development of high-throughput molecular biology techniques and the consequent generation of massive data have made Bioinformatics essential for undergraduate Bioscience students. The importance of this scientific discipline is evidenced by the huge number of specialized publications, tools, and databases available. Training in…
Descriptors: Active Learning, Teaching Methods, Molecular Structure, Biology
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Xinjian Cen; Maci Kight; Rachel Lee; Petra Kranzfelder; Stanley M. Lo; Jeffrey Maloy; Melinda T. Owens – CBE - Life Sciences Education, 2025
Instructors often provide feedback to their class in multiple ways. One way is through their follow-up behaviors, which are the specific strategies instructors implement after active learning activities. These behaviors could play an important role in student learning as students receive feedback from the instructor. However, there is little…
Descriptors: Teacher Behavior, Active Learning, Feedback (Response), Lesson Observation Criteria
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Karen Ho; Yen Luong; Carl Sherwood; Douglas B. Clark – Chemistry Education Research and Practice, 2024
Many students find introductory general chemistry courses difficult because they feel alienated by traditional approaches to teaching and learning. This can become particularly problematic in laboratory sessions where students simply follow processes and procedures that students can view as being mundane and lacking creativity. Contextualised…
Descriptors: Chemistry, Science Instruction, Story Telling, College Science
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Cle´mence Iacconi; Jonathan Piard; Elena Tosi-Brandi; Franc¸ois Azambourg; Marion Dubois; Vincent Cre´ance; Loi¨c Bertrand – Journal of Chemical Education, 2024
There is a gap between the importance of certain archeological material sources and their perception, both by professionals and by the general public. Textiles, for example, are essential to understanding practices that marked daily life and rituals in the past, but they have often been extremely degraded over time, particularly in temperate…
Descriptors: Archaeology, Chemistry, Active Learning, Student Projects
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Melissa Dancy; Charles Henderson; Naneh Apkarian; Estrella Johnson; Marilyne Stains; Jeffrey R. Raker; Alexandra Lau – Physical Review Physics Education Research, 2024
A survey of 722 physics faculty conducted in 2008 found that many physics instructors had knowledge of research-based instructional strategies (RBISs), were interested in using more, but often discontinued use after trying. Considerable effort has been made during the decade following 2008 to develop and disseminate RBISs in physics as well as…
Descriptors: Science Instruction, Science Teachers, Knowledge Level, Active Learning
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Tong Wan; Juliette Pimbert; Reshawna L. Chapple; Ying Cao; Pierre-Philippe A. Ouimet – Physical Review Physics Education Research, 2025
Group work is commonly adopted in university science laboratories. However, student small-group discourse in university science labs is rarely investigated. We aim to bridge the gap in the literature by characterizing student discourse group roles in inquiry-based science labs. The instructional context for this study was a summer program hosted…
Descriptors: Inquiry, Active Learning, College Science, Science Laboratories
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Anupam Pradhan; Anuradha Srivastava – Forum for International Research on Students and Teaching, 2025
Evidence suggests that students exposed to authentic undergraduate research activities are more successful than those who are not. Not all students in an undergraduate program get an opportunity for mentored research, which is still the popular way to expose them to authentic research. However, involvement in undergraduate research can be…
Descriptors: Undergraduate Students, Student Research, Biology, College Science
Amedee Marchand Martella; Marsha C. Lovett; Lynnette Ramsay – Journal on Excellence in College Teaching, 2021
To investigate the variation in active learning used in college science courses, the authors analyzed 57 comparison studies published in three prominent science education journals. Focusing on three sources of variation--(a) the active learning activities, (b) other pedagogical features, and (c) course structure/design--they found that most…
Descriptors: Active Learning, College Science, Educational Research, Science Instruction
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William C. Beckerson; Jennifer Anderson; Siddhesh Kulkarni; John Perpich; Deborah R. Yoder-Himes – Journal of College Science Teaching, 2024
Active learning is the new standard for teaching in higher education. As more faculty seek to expand their teaching practices by including active-learning activities that promote higher levels of learning, many are doing so in small doses by temporarily postponing traditional lectures in favor of group activities. While there is evidence…
Descriptors: Active Learning, Biology, Science Instruction, Thinking Skills
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Heather A. McQueen – New Directions in the Teaching of Natural Sciences, 2024
Students in their first semester at university were asked to pose their own questions, known as quecture questions, for each learning topic. This was as part of their weekly preparation for flipped lectures on two parallel compulsory biology courses. Quecture questions are intended to engage students, particularly those with educational…
Descriptors: Questioning Techniques, First Generation College Students, College Freshmen, Science Instruction
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Wei-Zhao Shi; Chunying Zuo; Jingying Wang – Physical Review Physics Education Research, 2025
Previous research has shown that in prehigher education stages, inquiry-based teaching is not sufficient for forming a mature understanding of the nature of science (NOS). However, there is relatively little research conducted on colleges. Inquiry-based teaching should not overlook cognitive frameworks, as students' limited scientific reasoning…
Descriptors: Teaching Methods, Inquiry, Active Learning, College Science
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Cooper, Katelyn M.; Schinske, Jeffrey N.; Tanner, Kimberly D. – CBE - Life Sciences Education, 2021
A key tenet of the nature of science is that "knowledge, although reliable and durable, is never absolute or certain" and is subject to change with the accrual of new bodies of evidence (Lederman "et al." 2002). Similarly, pedagogical choices grounded in scientific teaching would also be expected to be modified, refined, and…
Descriptors: Science Instruction, Cooperative Learning, Active Learning, Instructional Effectiveness
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