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Sharkawy, Azza – Science and Children, 2010
Questions are powerful tools that are central to scientific inquiry. Given the importance of investigable questions to scientific inquiry, what can teachers do to help students learn how to generate them? Possibilities the author explores in this article are (a) demonstrating to students that we value their questions, (b) providing students with…
Descriptors: Scientific Principles, Questioning Techniques, Inquiry, Scientific Literacy
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Person, Eric C.; Golden, Donnie R.; Royce, Brenda R. – Journal of Chemical Education, 2010
This quick and inexpensive demonstration of the salting of an alcohol out of an aqueous solution illustrates the impact of intermolecular forces on solubility using materials familiar to many students. Ammonium sulfate (fertilizer) is added to an aqueous 35% solution of isopropyl alcohol (rubbing alcohol and water) containing food coloring as a…
Descriptors: Chemistry, Science Instruction, Molecular Structure, Science Experiments
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Schwinefus, Jeffrey J.; Leslie, Elizabeth J.; Nordstrom, Anna R. – Journal of Chemical Education, 2010
The four-week student project described in this article is an extension of protein thermal denaturation experiments to include effects of added cosolutes ethylene glycol, glycine betaine, and urea on the unfolding of lysozyme. The transition temperatures and van't Hoff enthalpies for unfolding are evaluated for six concentrations of each cosolute,…
Descriptors: Student Projects, Science Instruction, Teaching Methods, Chemistry
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Andrade-Gamboa, Julio; Martire, Daniel O.; Donati, Edgardo R. – Journal of Chemical Education, 2010
One-component phase diagrams are good approximations to predict pressure-temperature ("P-T") behavior of a substance in the presence of air, provided air pressure is not much higher than the vapor pressure. However, at any air pressure, and from the conceptual point of view, the use of a traditional "P-T" phase diagram is not strictly correct. In…
Descriptors: Science Activities, Teaching Methods, Climate, Science Instruction
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Ault, Addison – Journal of Chemical Education, 2010
In this article I support and extend the ideas presented by J. Brent Friesen in his article "Saying What You Mean; Teaching Mechanisms in Organic Chemistry" ("JCE" November, 2008). I emphasize "telling the truth" about proton transfers. The truth is that in aqueous acid most reactions are subject to "specific" acid catalysis: the only kinetically…
Descriptors: Organic Chemistry, Science Instruction, Teaching Methods, College Science
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Hanson, John; Dasher, Bill; Scharrer, Eric; Hoyt, Tim – Journal of Chemical Education, 2010
Students in the second-semester organic chemistry laboratory perform a Wittig reaction between butylidenetriphenylphosphorane (an ylide) and benzaldehyde and determine the relative percentages of the cis and trans isomers of the 1-phenyl-1-pentene product. Because of the highly reactive nature of this unstabilized ylide, students are introduced to…
Descriptors: Organic Chemistry, Science Instruction, College Science, Science Laboratories
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Cardellini, Liberato – Journal of Chemical Education, 2010
Ronald J. Gillespie, the inventor of the Valence Shell Electron Pair Repulsion (VSEPR) model, relates how his career as researcher in Christopher Ingold's laboratories started. Gillespie developed a passion for chemistry and chemical education, searching for more appropriate and interesting ways to transmit the essential knowledge and enthusiasm…
Descriptors: Researchers, Chemistry, Science Laboratories, Science Instruction
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Hadfield, Linda C.; Wieman, Carl E. – Journal of Chemical Education, 2010
Student interpretations of the equation for the first law of thermodynamics, [delta]U = q + w, an expression defining work done on or by a gas, w = -[image omitted]PdV, and an expression defining heat, q = [image omitted]C[subscript v]dT were investigated through a multiple-choice survey, a free-response written survey, and interviews. The…
Descriptors: Thermodynamics, Science Instruction, Scientific Principles, College Science
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Rosenblatt, Abram – Evaluation and Program Planning, 2010
The system of care approach as a strategy for serving children and adolescents with serious emotional disturbance (SED) is by any measure a success with one exception: there is controversy regarding the scientific evidence documenting that the services provided through systems of care improve the symptomatic and functional outcomes of the youth…
Descriptors: Health Services, Mental Health Programs, Children, Adolescents
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Kelley, Todd R. – Technology Teacher, 2010
A number of leaders in technology education have indicated that a major difference between the technological design process and the engineering design process is analysis and optimization. The analysis stage of the engineering design process is when mathematical models and scientific principles are employed to help the designer predict design…
Descriptors: Design, Mathematical Models, Scientific Principles, Engineering
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Cahan, David – Annals of Science, 2010
This essay recounts Hermann von Helmholtz's trip to represent Germany at the International Electrical Congress in Chicago in 1893 as well as his reception by various members of the American scientific, technological, and cultural elite in several other American cities. In doing so, it seeks to portray something of the vitality of the youthful and…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Time Perspective, Scientists, Reputation
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Bacon, M. E.; Sharrar, Amber – European Journal of Physics, 2010
A standard topic in an advanced undergraduate classical mechanics course is the determination of the orbits in a gravitational field. In the present paper we report on the calculation of bound orbits in the gravitational field of a spiral galaxy. Calculations such as these could serve to focus attention on an area of cutting edge astrophysics and…
Descriptors: Mechanics (Physics), Scientific Principles, College Science, Undergraduate Study
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Chiou, Guo-Li; Anderson, O. Roger – International Journal of Science Education, 2010
This study proposes a multi-dimensional approach to investigate, represent, and categorize students' in-depth understanding of complex physics concepts. Clinical interviews were conducted with 30 undergraduate physics students to probe their understanding of heat conduction. Based on the data analysis, six aspects of the participants' responses…
Descriptors: Physics, Undergraduate Students, College Science, Scientific Principles
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Rickards, Tudor – Gifted and Talented International, 2010
The basic premise of the paper (Ghassib, 2010) provides much needed scope for scholarly discussion regarding the location of creativity and innovation in the processes of knowledge production. Its conceptualization may be examined alongside recent contributions to creativity theory and practice at the levels of individual, team, and organization.…
Descriptors: Creativity, Scholarship, Innovation, Cognitive Processes
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Quiroga, M.; Martinez, S.; Otranto, S. – Physics Teacher, 2010
This paper describes a very simple exercise using an inverted test tube pushed straight down into a column of water to determine the free-fall acceleration "g". The exercise employs the ideal gas law and only involves the measurement of the displacement of the bottom of the "diving bell" and the water level inside the tube with respect to the…
Descriptors: Motion, Physics, Science Instruction, Water
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