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Supalo, Cary A.; Dwyer, Danielle; Eberhart, Heather L.; Bunnag, Natasha; Mallouk, Thomas E. – Journal of Science Education for Students with Disabilities, 2009
The Independent Laboratory Access for the Blind (ILAB) project has developed a suite of speech accessible tools for students who are blind or low vision to use in secondary and postsecondary science laboratory classes. The following are illustrations of experiments designed to be used by educators to introduce them to the ILAB tools, and to…
Descriptors: Teacher Education, Blindness, Partial Vision, Visual Impairments
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Vollmer, M. – European Journal of Physics, 2009
The cooling of objects is often described by a law, attributed to Newton, which states that the temperature difference of a cooling body with respect to the surroundings decreases exponentially with time. Such behaviour has been observed for many laboratory experiments, which led to a wide acceptance of this approach. However, the heat transfer…
Descriptors: Heat, Climate, Laboratory Experiments, Scientific Principles
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Arnquist, Isaac J.; Beussman, Douglas J. – Journal of Chemical Education, 2009
Mass spectrometry has become a routine analytical tool in the undergraduate curriculum in the form of GC-MS. While relatively few undergraduate programs have incorporated biological mass spectrometry into their programs, the importance of these techniques, as demonstrated by their recognition with the 2002 Nobel Prize, will hopefully lead to…
Descriptors: Undergraduate Students, Undergraduate Study, Chemistry, Laboratory Experiments
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Wang, Lipeng; Li, Mingqiu – Higher Education Studies, 2012
Currently, it has become a fundamental goal for the engineering major to cultivate high-quality engineering technicians with innovation ability in scientific research which is an important academic ability necessary for them. This paper mainly explores the development of comprehensive and designing experiments in automation based on scientific…
Descriptors: Scientific Research, Research Projects, Automation, Student Research
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Long, Gary L.; Bailey, Carol A.; Bunn, Barbara B.; Slebodnick, Carla; Johnson, Michael R.; Derozier, Shad – Journal of Chemical Education, 2012
The Chemistry Outreach Program (ChOP) of Virginia Tech was a university-based outreach program that addressed the needs of high school chemistry classes in underfunded rural and inner-city school districts. The primary features of ChOP were a mobile chemistry laboratory (MCL), a shipping-based outreach program (ChemKits), and teacher workshops.…
Descriptors: Chemistry, Urban Schools, Outreach Programs, Science Instruction
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Prater, Mary Anne; Carter, Nari; Hitchcock, Caryl; Dowrick, Peter – Psychology in the Schools, 2012
Video self-modeling (VSM) has been used for decades to effectively improve individuals' behaviors and skills. The purpose of this review is to locate and analyze published studies that used VSM for typical school-based academic skills to determine the effect of VSM interventions on students' academic performance. Only eight studies were located…
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Program Effectiveness, Video Technology, Educational Change
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Sauterer, Roger; Rayburn, James R. – American Biology Teacher, 2012
Introducing students to the process of scientific inquiry is a major goal of high school and college labs. Environmental toxins are of great concern and public interest. Modifications of a vertebrate developmental toxicity assay using the frog Xenopus laevis can support student-initiated toxicology experiments that are relevant to humans. Teams of…
Descriptors: Student Projects, Toxicology, Biology, Environmental Education
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Kalinowski, Steven T.; Andrews, Tessa M.; Leonard, Mary J.; Snodgrass, Meagan – CBE - Life Sciences Education, 2012
Many students do not recognize that individual organisms within populations vary, and this may make it difficult for them to recognize the essential role variation plays in natural selection. Also, many students have weak scientific reasoning skills, and this makes it difficult for them to recognize misconceptions they might have. This paper…
Descriptors: Undergraduate Students, Genetics, Laboratories, Biodiversity
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Yamaguchi, Motonori; Proctor, Robert W. – Psychological Review, 2012
The present study proposes and examines the multidimensional vector (MDV) model framework as a modeling schema for choice response times. MDV extends the Thurstonian model, as well as signal detection theory, to classification tasks by taking into account the influence of response properties on stimulus discrimination. It is capable of accounting…
Descriptors: Educational Technology, Mathematical Models, Scaling, Experiments
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Westermann, Katharina; Rummel, Nikol – Instructional Science: An International Journal of the Learning Sciences, 2012
To promote student learning in a relearning situation in university-level mathematics, we developed the learning method TAU ("Think Ask Understand"). TAU provides support (i.e. a role script) for students' interaction during a collaborative problem-solving phase at the beginning of the learning process, while content-related instruction is delayed…
Descriptors: Direct Instruction, Academic Achievement, Interaction, Higher Education
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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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Allen, Michael; Coole, Hilary – Journal of Science Teacher Education, 2012
This paper describes a randomised educational experiment (n = 47) that examined two different teaching methods and compared their effectiveness at correcting one science misconception using a sample of trainee primary school teachers. The treatment was designed to promote engagement with the scientific concept by eliciting emotional responses from…
Descriptors: Student Attitudes, Scientific Concepts, Learning Experience, Misconceptions
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Stephens, Philip J. – Advances in Physiology Education, 2012
An online, lecture/laboratory course in Human Physiology was run in two sections in five consecutive summers. In each year, the two sections were identical in content, assignments, and assessments but were different in duration; the shorter section was 1 mo and the longer section lasted 2 mo. The shorter section had a higher enrollment and a…
Descriptors: Distance Education, Online Courses, Physiology, Pretests Posttests
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Hess, Rebecca; Visschers, Vivianne H. M.; Siegrist, Michael – Journal of Nutrition Education and Behavior, 2012
Objective: To compare the influence of a food guide's shape on its effectiveness and efficiency to convey nutritional information. Methods: A between-subjects experiment was conducted by manipulating the graph's shape (circle, pyramid, or rainbow). Nutrition tasks were used to assess the effectiveness and eye-movement data (number/duration of…
Descriptors: Statistical Analysis, Nutrition, Nutrition Instruction, Food
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Johnson, Rebecca L.; Dunne, Maxine D. – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Human Perception and Performance, 2012
The current experiments explored the parafoveal processing of transposed-letter (TL) neighbors by using an eye-movement-contingent boundary change paradigm. In Experiment 1 readers received a parafoveal preview of a target word (e.g., "calm") that was either (1) identical to the target word ("calm"), (2) a TL-neighbor ("clam"), or (3) a…
Descriptors: Evidence, Word Recognition, Vocabulary Development, Experiments
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