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Kho, Lee Sze; Chen, Chwen Jen – Interactive Learning Environments, 2017
Student response systems (SRSs) are wireless answering devices that enable students to provide simple real-time feedback to instructors. This study aims to evaluate the effects of different SRS interaction modes on elementary school students' science learning. Three interaction modes which include SRS Individual, SRS Collaborative, and Classroom…
Descriptors: Elementary School Students, Elementary School Science, Quasiexperimental Design, Intermode Differences
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Rönnebeck, Silke; Bernholt, Sascha; Ropohl, Mathias – Studies in Science Education, 2016
Despite the importance of scientific inquiry in science education, researchers and educators disagree considerably regarding what features define this instructional approach. While a large body of literature addresses theoretical considerations, numerous empirical studies investigate scientific inquiry on quite different levels of detail and also…
Descriptors: Literature Reviews, Inquiry, Scientific Research, Scientific Concepts
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Miller, Scott – Physics Teacher, 2014
Oftentimes physics is portrayed as merely a list of facts that we know about the world around us, when in fact it is a way of knowing about that world. At times physics claims to understand the inner working of objects that cannot be directly observed, such as the core of the planets and Sun, or the structure of an atom. It is important for…
Descriptors: Scientific Principles, Physics, Observation, Inferences
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Keeley, Page – Science and Children, 2010
Formative assessment probes are used not only to uncover the ideas students bring to their learning, they can also be used to reveal teachers' common misconceptions. Consider a process widely used in inquiry science--developing hypotheses. In this article, the author features the probe "Is It a Hypothesis?", which serves as an example of how…
Descriptors: Student Evaluation, Formative Evaluation, Transformative Learning, Misconceptions
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VanDorn, Kristy – Science Scope, 2005
Venture into the author's seventh-grade classroom on any given day, and one is likely to see students hypothesizing, designing experiments to test their explanations, analyzing data, writing formal publications of results, and debating over scientific procedures in an attempt to justify their control of variables. Students are motivated, on-task,…
Descriptors: Scientific Concepts, Science Activities, Hypothesis Testing, Teaching Methods
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Journet, Alan R. P. – Journal of College Science Teaching, 1994
Describes an activity appropriate for college or high school students where they make hypotheses about prearranged patterns in a deck of playing cards. (PR)
Descriptors: College Faculty, College Science, Higher Education, Hypothesis Testing
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Constible, Juanita; Lee, Richard E., Jr. – Science Teacher, 2006
Insects are a natural choice for studying behavioral ecology in the classroom--they are easy to obtain, maintain, and manipulate. Unlike competition and predation, however, the concept of group living does not translate well to small-scale experiments involving only a few individuals. How can inquiry be used to examine why animals live in groups?…
Descriptors: Ecology, Entomology, Inquiry, Science Instruction
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Mayo, Lois T.; Friedrichsen, Pat J. – American Biology Teacher, 1993
Presents a laboratory activity for use during the first or second week of school that engages students in the basic principles of the scientific method. (PR)
Descriptors: Biology, High Schools, Hypothesis Testing, Learning Activities
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Scarnati, James T.; Tice, Craig J. – Science Activities, 1992
Describes how students can make and use Hooey Machines to learn how mechanical energy can be transferred from one object to another within a system. The Hooey Machine is made using a pencil, eight thumbtacks, one pushpin, tape, scissors, graph paper, and a plastic lid. (PR)
Descriptors: Elementary Education, Elementary School Science, Energy, Hypothesis Testing
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Vestal, Bedford M.; Estes, James R. – American Biology Teacher, 1992
Outlines a student research study in animal behavior to help develop students' empirical skills. The study examines the differences between male and female students in the way that they carry their school books. Reports results of one study indicating no significant difference in bookcarrying habits of men and women. (MDH)
Descriptors: Animal Behavior, Biology, Class Activities, College Science