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Albe, Virginie – Science & Education, 2008
Efforts have been devoted to introduce in science curricula direct instruction for evaluating scientific reports on socioscientific issues. In this study, students' opinions on the SSI of mobile telephones effects have been investigated before and after a classroom activity designed to enable students to assess scientific data. Aspects of the…
Descriptors: Student Attitudes, Scientific Principles, Controversial Issues (Course Content), Science Instruction
Monastersky, Richard – Chronicle of Higher Education, 2008
Switzerland is the land of Big Ideas, where even the streets have Nobel prizes. At the European particle physics lab known as CERN, the roads through campus bear the names of Einstein, Curie, Bohr, and Heisenberg. Working amid those tributes to giants of the past century, physicists from around the world are trying to make history of their own and…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Scientists, Research and Development Centers, Scientific Research
Robinson, A. W.; Patrick, C. G. – Physics Education, 2008
We present a case study of the physical principles necessary to model the high altitude parachute jump made by Colonel Joseph Kittinger, USAF, in 1960, in order to determine the maximum speed attained and to calculate whether this speed was sufficient to exceed the speed of sound at that altitude. There is considerable discrepancy in the value of…
Descriptors: Mathematical Models, Visual Aids, Physics, Case Studies
Postcolonial Foldings of Space and Identity in Science Education: Limits, Transformations, Prospects
Zembylas, Michalinos; Avraamidou, Lucy – Cultural Studies of Science Education, 2008
The four essays reviewed here constitute a worthwhile attempt to discuss various aspects of postcolonial theory, and offer constructive ideas to ongoing academic as well as public conversations with respect to whether science education can meet the challenges of educating an increasingly diverse population in the 21st century. These essays are…
Descriptors: Global Approach, Criticism, Science Education, Cultural Pluralism
Mazur, Zygmunt; Grech, Dariusz – European Journal of Physics, 2008
A simple model of the random Brownian walk of a spherical mesoscopic particle in viscous liquids is proposed. The model can be solved analytically and simulated numerically. The analytic solution gives the known Einstein-Smoluchowski diffusion law r[superscript 2] = 2Dt, where the diffusion constant D is expressed by the mass and geometry of a…
Descriptors: Science Instruction, Science Laboratories, Physics, College Science
Friesen, J. Brent – Journal of Chemical Education, 2008
Organic reactions in introductory organic chemistry courses are most commonly taught with a mechanism-based approach to the understanding of molecular reactivity. However, the effectiveness of the popular curved arrow representation to describe reaction mechanisms is often compromised by the overuse of shortcuts and obscure notation. The…
Descriptors: Organic Chemistry, Science Instruction, Molecular Structure, Teaching Methods
Pendrill, Ann-Marie – Physics Education, 2008
A carousel gives possibilities to explore physics in rotating systems and to gain first-hand experience of methods to measure rotation, without the need for an external reference. This paper discusses the Foucault pendulum, as well as the sideways deflection of horizontally and vertically moving objects in a rotating system. These experiments lay…
Descriptors: Physics, Measurement Techniques, Scientific Principles, Science Instruction
Shepard, Roger N. – Cognitive Science, 2008
Examples from Archimedes, Galileo, Newton, Einstein, and others suggest that fundamental laws of physics were--or, at least, could have been--discovered by experiments performed not in the physical world but only in the mind. Although problematic for a strict empiricist, the evolutionary emergence in humans of deeply internalized implicit…
Descriptors: Physics, Ethics, Epistemology, Abstract Reasoning
Kipnis, Nahum – Science & Education, 2007
A proper presentation of scientific discoveries may allow science teachers to eliminate certain myths about the nature of science, which originate from an uncertainty among scholars about what constitutes a discovery. It is shown that a disagreement on this matter originates from a confusion of the act of discovery with response to it. It is…
Descriptors: Scientific Principles, Optics, Science Teachers, Science Education
Portides, Demetris P. – Science & Education, 2007
The notions of "idealisation" and "approximation" are strongly linked to the question of "how our theories represent the phenomena in their scope". Although there is no consensus amongst Philosophers on the nature of the process of idealisation and how it affects theoretical representation, at the level of science education much can be gained from…
Descriptors: Science Education, Teaching Methods, Science Instruction, Scientific Principles
Kizowski, Czeslaw; Budzik, Sylwia; Cebulski, Jozef – Physics Teacher, 2007
The laboratory exercise described in this paper is based on a well-known qualitative demonstration of Curie temperature. A long ferromagnetic wire, in the form of a spiral, is attracted to a strong permanent magnet placed near its midpoint (see Fig. 1). The temperature of the wire is increased by passing a current through it. When the temperature…
Descriptors: Scientific Principles, Magnets, Science Instruction, Physics
Hobson, Art – Physics Teacher, 2007
Although the resolution to the wave-particle paradox has been known for 80 years, it is seldom presented. Briefly, the resolution is that material particles and photons are the quanta of extended spatially continuous but energetically quantized fields. But because the resolution resides in quantum field theory and is not usually spelled out in…
Descriptors: Quantum Mechanics, Physics, Science Instruction, Scientific Principles
Piccioni, R. G. – Physics Teacher, 2007
Too often, students in introductory courses are left with the impression that Einstein's special theory of relativity comes into play only when the relative speed of two objects is an appreciable fraction of the speed of light ("c"). In fact, relativistic length contraction, along with Coulomb's law, accounts quantitatively for the force on a…
Descriptors: Physics, Magnets, Scientific Principles, Science Instruction
Tefft, Brandon J.; Tefft, James A. – Physics Teacher, 2007
As the topic of relativity is developed in a first-year physics class, there seems to be a tendency to move as quickly as possible to the fascinating ideas set forth in Einstein's special theory of relativity. In this paper we linger a little with the Galilean side of relativity and discuss an intriguing problem and its solution to illustrate a…
Descriptors: Kinetics, Scientific Concepts, Scientific Principles, Theories
Lietz, Martha – Physics Teacher, 2007
Teachers have been building mystery circuits or so-called "black box circuits" to use as a demonstration with their students for years. This paper presents an easy way to make simple mystery circuits using inexpensive light fixtures (see Fig. 1) available at almost any home improvement store. In a black box circuit, only the lightbulbs are visible…
Descriptors: Science Instruction, Light, Physics, Energy

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