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Showing 1 to 15 of 21 results Save | Export
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Rayendra Wahyu Bachtiar; Ralph F. G. Meulenbroeks; Wouter R. Joolingen – Journal of Research in Science Teaching, 2024
Previous studies have documented the promising results from student-constructed representations, including stop-motion animation (SMA), in supporting mechanistic reasoning (MR), which is considered an essential thinking skill in science education. Our current study presents theoretically and empirically how student-constructed SMA contributes to…
Descriptors: Animation, Thinking Skills, Science Education, Skill Development
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Lei Du; Xiaoyu Tang; Jingying Wang – Education and Information Technologies, 2025
Educational animation, recognized for its potential accessibility and engaging qualities, has become increasingly prevalent in classroom instruction. However, not all educational animations exhibit high quality or significantly enhance learning outcomes. This study addresses the need for optimizing educational animation design to enhance student…
Descriptors: Elementary School Students, Grade 5, Animation, Educational Television
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Ozdemir, Ertugrul – Journal of Science Learning, 2022
Before taking formal science education, learners usually construct preconceptions based on their daily life experiences, many of which are scientifically unacceptable misconceptions. In formal science learning, new concepts often contradict these misconceptions. To correct a misconception, it is first needed to create dissatisfaction about it by…
Descriptors: Animation, Cartoons, Cognitive Processes, Electronic Learning
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Teplá, Milada; Teplý, Pavel; Šmejkal, Petr – International Journal of STEM Education, 2022
Background: Studies comparing the effect of dynamic and static visualization suggest a predominantly positive effect of dynamic visualization. However, the results of individual comparisons are highly heterogeneous. In this study, we assess whether dynamic visualization (3D models and animations) used in the experimental group has a stronger…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Middle School Students, High School Students, Visual Aids
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Tibell, Lena A. E.; Harms, Ute – Science & Education, 2017
Modern evolutionary theory is both a central theory and an integrative framework of the life sciences. This is reflected in the common references to evolution in modern science education curricula and contexts. In fact, evolution is a core idea that is supposed to support biology learning by facilitating the organization of relevant knowledge. In…
Descriptors: Biology, Scientific Concepts, Fundamental Concepts, Evolution
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Tomaraa, Marina; Tselfes, Vassilis; Goucos, Dimitris – Themes in Science and Technology Education, 2017
During the last four decades, the results of a great deal of research have indicated that, prior to any formal instruction in physics, students hold scientifically incorrect ideas about physics concepts in general, and about the force and motion concepts in particular, the latter being considered central in science teaching. To these days,…
Descriptors: Teaching Methods, Science Instruction, Physics, Scientific Concepts
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Johansson, K. Erik – Physics Education, 2013
With real particle collision data available on the web, the amazing dynamics of the fundamental particles of the standard model can be explored in classrooms. Complementing the events from the ATLAS experiment with animations of the fundamental processes on the quark and gluon level makes it possible to better understand the invisible world of…
Descriptors: Models, Experiments, Animation, Physics
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Kwasu, Isaac Ali; Yalams, Simon Madugu; Ema, Ema – Journal of Education and Practice, 2016
This paper presents an outline on how teachers can use "The Design Process and Animation Techniques to produce animated instructional resources (AIR) which, can be used to facilitate Open Distance Learning in especially Science and Technology Education. A model of the Animated Instructional Resource was developed for the teaching of Human…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Design, Animation, Instructional Materials
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Jenkinson, Jodie; McGill, Gael – CBE - Life Sciences Education, 2012
Undergraduate biology education provides students with a number of learning challenges. Subject areas that are particularly difficult to understand include protein conformational change and stability, diffusion and random molecular motion, and molecular crowding. In this study, we examined the relative effectiveness of three-dimensional…
Descriptors: Animation, Medical Schools, Visualization, Motion
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Yarden, Hagit; Yarden, Anat – Journal of Science Education and Technology, 2011
Animation has great potential for improving the way people learn. A number of studies in different scientific disciplines have shown that instruction involving computer animations can facilitate the understanding of processes at the molecular level. However, using animation alone does not ensure learning. Students sometimes miss essential features…
Descriptors: Constructivism (Learning), Animation, Biotechnology, Misconceptions
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O'Day, Danton H. – Journal of College Teaching & Learning, 2010
Textbook companies are increasingly including larger numbers of animations as complementary resources for students and teachers. Are all animations useful as teaching tools? The answer is no. Animations can be useful for communicating dynamic events and processes but only when specific rules are followed. The authors review the important…
Descriptors: Feedback (Response), Textbooks, Long Term Memory, Science Education
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Karlsson, Goran – International Journal of Computer-Supported Collaborative Learning, 2010
This case study reports on how students, working collaboratively, interpret and construct a written report of the events described in animated educational software. The analysis is based on video recordings of two upper-secondary-school students while they are endeavouring to construe an animated sequence of the mouldering process. How the…
Descriptors: Animation, Computer Software, Scientific Concepts, Educational Technology
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Bradley, Lucy K.; Stutz, Jean C.; Towill, Leslie R. – Journal of Natural Resources and Life Sciences Education, 2009
The lecture content of a Plant Biology class for non-majors was transformed from a traditional on-campus lecture to an asynchronous website for use both as a stand-alone internet-based course and as an adjunct to the on-campus course. Additional information and examples of the online interactive activities included in PLB 108, Concepts in Plant…
Descriptors: Botany, Biology, Educational Technology, Internet
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Nowinski, Wieslaw L.; Thirunavuukarasuu, Arumugam; Volkau, Ihar; Marchenko, Yevgen; Aminah, Bivi; Gelas, Arnaud; Huang, Su; Lee, Looi Chow; Liu, Jimin; Ng, Ting Ting; Nowinska, Natalia G.; Qian, Guoyu Yu; Puspitasari, Fiftarina; Runge, Val M. – Anatomical Sciences Education, 2009
The increasing complexity of human body models enabled by advances in diagnostic imaging, computing, and growing knowledge calls for the development of a new generation of systems for intelligent exploration of these models. Here, we introduce a novel paradigm for the exploration of digital body models illustrating cerebral vasculature. It enables…
Descriptors: Medical Education, Models, Human Body, Brain
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Schleich, Jean-Marc; Dillenseger, Jean-Louis; Houyel, Lucile; Almange, Claude; Anderson, Robert H. – Anatomical Sciences Education, 2009
Learning embryology remains difficult, since it requires understanding of many complex phenomena. The temporal evolution of developmental events has classically been illustrated using cartoons, which create difficulty in linking spatial and temporal aspects, such correlation being the keystone of descriptive embryology. We synthesized the…
Descriptors: Computer Graphics, Cartoons, Pediatrics, Embryology
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