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Tilsen, Julie – Journal of Family Life: A Quarterly for Empowering Families, 1998
Decsribes the use of a dog in individual and group therapy with youth and adults. The presence of, and interaction with, the dog stimulated patients, facilitated discussions around pet memories and experiences, elevated patients a bit from their status as chronic dependents, and allowed children to engage in normal cooperative experiences. (SAS)
Descriptors: Adolescents, Animals, Children, Helping Relationship
Allen, Robert Ross – Camping Magazine, 2001
A camp snake program can help campers overcome their fear of snakes, and people cannot truly enjoy nature when they carry a phobia about any one part of it. It can also help overcome prejudice by teaching truth and respect, instilling compassion, and helping campers develop empathy. Advice on catching, handling, identifying, keeping, and feeding…
Descriptors: Animals, Attitude Change, Bias, Camping
Peer reviewedSmith, Douglas G. – American Biology Teacher, 1998
Recommends the use of food storage jars for long-term storage of specimens in biology laboratories. Reports excellent preservation rates over a 20-year period. (DDR)
Descriptors: Biology, Higher Education, Laboratory Animals, Laboratory Equipment
Peer reviewedSwanagan, Jeffrey S. – Journal of Environmental Education, 2000
Predicts that Zoo Atlanta visitors who had interactive experience with the zoo's elephant demonstration and bio-fact program would be more likely to actively support elephant conservation than those who simply viewed the animals in their exhibit and read graphics. Uses survey instruments including 25 closed-ended questions, petitions, and…
Descriptors: Animals, Attitudes, Behavior, Elementary Secondary Education
Shull, Richard L.; Grimes, Julie A.; Bennett, J. Adam – Journal of the Experimental Analysis of Behavior, 2004
By nose poking a lighted key, rats obtained food pellets on either a variable- interval schedule of reinforcement or a schedule that required an average of four additional responses after the end of the variable-interval component (a tandem variable-interval variable-ratio 4 schedule). With both schedule types, the mean variable interval was…
Descriptors: Reinforcement, Intervals, Time Management, Animals
Corrado, Greg S.; Sugrue, Leo P.; Seung, H. Sebastian; Newsome, William T. – Journal of the Experimental Analysis of Behavior, 2005
The equilibrium phenomenon of matching behavior traditionally has been studied in stationary environments. Here we attempt to uncover the local mechanism of choice that gives rise to matching by studying behavior in a highly dynamic foraging environment. In our experiments, 2 rhesus monkeys ("Macacca mulatta") foraged for juice rewards by making…
Descriptors: Models, Animal Behavior, Primatology, Selection
Jones, Emily J. H.; Herbert, Jane S. – Infant and Child Development, 2006
Imitation is an important means by which infants learn new behaviours. When infants do not have the opportunity to immediately reproduce observed actions, they may form a memory representation of the event which can guide their behaviour when a similar situation is encountered again. Imitation procedures can, therefore, provide insight into infant…
Descriptors: Infants, Memory, Imitation, Cognitive Development
Schneider, Katherine Standish – Journal of Visual Impairment and Blindness, 2005
Schools that train dog guides work hard to help their clients bond with their new partners, but during the initial training, little is said about the other end of the process, for example, when it is time to say good-bye. When people return for subsequent dogs, a grief group or individual counseling may be offered, but the focus remains on moving…
Descriptors: Grief, Visual Impairments, Animals, Individual Counseling
Maiti, Alakes; Samanta, G. P. – International Journal of Mathematical Education in Science and Technology, 2005
This paper reports on studies of the deterministic and stochastic behaviours of a predator-prey system with prey-dependent response function. The first part of the paper deals with the deterministic analysis of uniform boundedness, permanence, stability and bifurcation. In the second part the reproductive and mortality factors of the prey and…
Descriptors: Statistical Data, Simulation, Animals, Mathematical Models
Peer reviewedCannon, Jonathan G.; Burton, Robert A.; Wood, Steven G.; Owen, Noel L. – Journal of Chemical Education, 2004
The fish poisons derived from plants used throughout the world, not only as piscicides but also for a range of other uses, including insecticident and in folk medicines, is presented. The aim of this review is to provide a useful background for students interested in natural products.
Descriptors: Animals, Plants (Botany), Poisoning, Biochemistry
Lindroth, Linda – Teaching Pre K-8, 2005
Caught by a fingerprint - or is it an animal track? This paper suggests investigating with these science projects for Earth Day. Students love spy mysteries, and the popularity of TV shows such as CSI and Unsolved Mysteries indicates the fascination is not only limited to our students. Why not capture this fascination for your science classroom.…
Descriptors: Science Projects, Animals, Programming (Broadcast), Web Sites
Papini, Mauricio R.; Pellegrini, Santiago – Learning and Motivation, 2006
Surprising downshifts from more preferred (training incentive) to less preferred incentives (test incentive) are usually accompanied by emotional activation and suppression of conditioned behavior in rats. Two experiments were designed to determine whether consummatory behavior is similarly affected by downshifts of equal proportions. Within…
Descriptors: Scaling, Incentives, Behavior, Conditioning
Fountain, Stephen B.; Benson, Don M., Jr. – Learning and Motivation, 2006
Nonhuman animals, like humans, appear sensitive to the structure of the elements of sequences, perhaps even when the structure relates nonadjacent elements. In the present study, we examined the contribution of chunking, rule learning, and item memory when rats learned serial patterns composed of two interleaved subpatterns. In one group, the…
Descriptors: Memory, Animals, Serial Learning, Discrimination Learning
Pitts, John L. – Exceptional Parent, 2005
Animal Assisted Therapy (AAT) and Activities (AAA) have become well established in traditional physiological and psychological medicine in North America. While positive animal interaction is nothing new (Egyptian, Greek, Roman, many eastern and western cultures), the beneficial calming effects of therapy have only been well documented in the…
Descriptors: Animals, Pervasive Developmental Disorders, Children, Youth
Martin-Hansen, Lisa M. – Science Activities: Classroom Projects and Curriculum Ideas, 2005
The author, an elementary school teacher, describes a way of incorporating an inquiry approach to teaching by refining a crayfish unit originally found in an ESS (Elementary Science Study) module. She used a "coupled-inquiry" approach, a combination of guided-inquiry and open-inquiry, with an application used for assessment purposes. In five or…
Descriptors: Teaching Methods, Science Instruction, Inquiry, Science Activities

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