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Peer reviewedRobinson, William R. – Journal of Chemical Education, 2004
The process used by scientists as they pursue research as a wheel with questions at the hub and various stages of the inquiry in a circular arrangement around the hub is described. It is noted that the process of scientific inquiry can begin from any stage and that stages may be revisited as often as the particular inquiry requires.
Descriptors: Scientific Methodology, Inquiry, Scientists, Scientific Research
Mehdian, Noosha – English Language Teaching, 2009
Despite decades of efforts, alarming statistics about the literacy crisis from secondary school teachers indicate that the reading abilities of the learners are inadequate for the materials to be taught and teachers wonder if adolescents are literate enough, language-wise, to leave school and enter colleges or universities. The common mode of…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Teacher Role, Reading Teachers, Reading Instruction
Onuigbo, Wilson I. B. – Online Submission, 2009
The concept of premature discovery in science entails the publication of an important idea which remains uncited for a long period. Thereafter, a deluge of citations of its substance would occur. An overlooked example concerns the discovery in 1963 of how lung cancer cells stimulate the formation of new lymph vessels in man. Subsequently called…
Descriptors: Scientific Concepts, Medical Research, Cancer, Discovery Processes
Gynnild, Vidar; Holstad, Anders; Myrhaug, Dag – Mentoring & Tutoring: Partnership in Learning, 2008
This article reports on a case study of learning and academic achievement in engineering education. Two sets of oral exams were used as a source of information in relation to students' learning and needs in the learning situation. Through ensuing interviews, patterns of learning strategies were discerned. Academically successful students utilised…
Descriptors: Engineering Education, Academic Achievement, Learning Strategies, Tutors
Wood, Chris; Kaszubowski, Yvonne – Elementary School Journal, 2008
This exploratory study investigated the career development needs of 150 fourth-grade students from 2 rural school districts in the Midwestern United States. The Childhood Career Development Scale (CCDS) was administered in 6 classrooms at 2 elementary schools to assess Donald Super's 9 dimensions (information, curiosity, exploration, interests,…
Descriptors: Elementary School Students, Rural Schools, Career Development, Needs Assessment
Peer reviewedMacDonald, Theodore H. – Australian Mathematics Teacher, 1973
Descriptors: Discovery Processes, Mathematics, Mathematics Education, Number Concepts
Weimer, Richard C. – Educational Technology, 1975
An analysis of many definitions of discovery and a discourse on a new synthesis of these definitions. (HB)
Descriptors: Discovery Learning, Discovery Processes, Induction, Learning Processes
Oliver, Hugh – Interchange, 1977
Interviews with eleven Nobel Prize winners illustrate that, although a scientific discovery generally involves some kind of imaginative insight, there is no one obvious pattern whereby it manifests itself. (Author/MJB)
Descriptors: Creative Thinking, Creativity, Discovery Processes, Imagination
Smith, Cyril Stanley – Outlook, 1976
The role of aesthetics in motivating technological innovations and discoveries is discussed. (DT)
Descriptors: Creative Thinking, Discovery Processes, Scientific Enterprise, Scientific Methodology
O'Reilly, A. P. – Training Officer, 1973
First itemizing the barriers to creative thinking, the author proceeds to suggest brainstorming, morphology, and a method of alternating circles as procedures to encourage creativity. Courses in problem-solving have proven successful. (AG)
Descriptors: Creative Development, Creative Thinking, Creativity, Discovery Processes
Moffett, James – Elementary English, 1973
Inductive teaching methods are a form of discovery for generalities but are uneconomical and hard to warrant for the conveyance of facts. (MM)
Descriptors: Discovery Learning, Discovery Processes, Induction, Learning Processes
Chase, Bill – Library Journal, 1970
It should be the library's job to integrate a man with his present, thereby giving him a future, not to reconcile him with his past. (Author)
Descriptors: Cultural Activities, Cultural Context, Culture, Discovery Processes
Peer reviewedArons, Arnold B. – Physics Teacher, 1995
Presents the story of "The Perpetual Salt Fountain" to illustrate some fairly typical ramifications and vagaries in the workings of science. Outlines the discovery of double diffusive convection and uses the fact that it had been observed in the laboratory a century before its independent rediscovery to emphasize the vagaries of…
Descriptors: Discovery Processes, Oceanography, Physics, Science Education
Peer reviewedMorris, Edward K. – Journal of Applied Behavior Analysis, 1991
This essay presents a deconstruction of the phrase "technological to a fault" as it relates to applied behavior analysis. The essay discusses the imbalance between analysis as demonstration and analysis as discovery, offers a consequence and a cause, and examines the relationship of discovery and demonstration to behavior-analytic…
Descriptors: Behavior Problems, Behavioral Science Research, Discovery Processes, Epistemology
Peer reviewedChissick, Naomi – Mathematics Teacher, 2004
Learning through discovery and inquiry is one of the cornerstones of mathematics education theory. The examples provide scope for the students to rediscover mathematics in an enjoyable way.
Descriptors: Mathematics Education, Educational Theories, Inquiry, Discovery Processes

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