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Tieman, Deborah; Haxer, Gary – Science Teacher, 2007
To most students entering today's biology classes, evolution is something that occurred long ago, and is therefore irrelevant to their lives. Examples of evolution that are important concerns in the modern world, such as the resistance of insects to pesticides and antibiotic resistance, do not match students' concept of evolution. In this article,…
Descriptors: Entomology, Biology, Evolution, Science Activities
Coelho, Ricardo Lopes – Science & Education, 2007
The law of inertia is a problem in teaching due to the impossibility of showing the proposition experimentally. As we cannot do an experiment to verify the law, we cannot know if it is correct. On the other hand, we know that the science based upon it is successful. A study in the history of mechanics has shown that there are different foundations…
Descriptors: Mechanics (Physics), Motion, Science Instruction, Scientific Principles
Van Hook, Stephen; Lark, Adam; Hodges, Jeff; Celebrezze, Eric; Channels, Lindsey – Physics Teacher, 2007
A playground can provide a valuable physics education laboratory. For example, Taylor et al. describe bringing teachers in a workshop to a playground to examine the physics of a seesaw and slide, and briefly suggest experiments involving a merry-go-round. In this paper, we describe an experiment performed by students from a Society of Physics…
Descriptors: Physics, Playgrounds, Science Education, Motion
Sobel, Michael – Physics Teacher, 2007
In the usual treatment of waves in introductory courses, one begins with traveling waves and the frequency/wavelength relationship f[lambda] = v, where "v" is the wave velocity. One then makes the point about superposition and shows that two waves traveling in opposite directions can add up to a standing wave; Eq. (1) still applies. This approach…
Descriptors: Science Instruction, Physics, Scientific Principles, Introductory Courses
Gayetsky, Lisa E.; Caylor, Craig L. – Physics Teacher, 2007
We describe a simple undergraduate lab in which students determine how the force between two magnetic dipoles depends on their separation. We consider the case where both dipoles are permanent and the case where one of the dipoles is induced by the field of the other (permanent) dipole. Agreement with theoretically expected results is quite good.
Descriptors: Magnets, College Science, Science Laboratories, Undergraduate Study
Moloney, Michael J. – Physics Teacher, 2007
Did you know that some strong little cylindrical magnets available in local hardware stores can have an effective circumferential current of 2500 A? This intriguing information can be obtained by hanging a pair of magnets at the center of a coil, as shown in Fig. 1, and measuring the oscillation frequency as a function of coil current.
Descriptors: Science Equipment, Magnets, Science Instruction, Scientific Principles
Costa, Ivan F.; Mocellin, Alexandra – Physics Teacher, 2007
This paper illustrates a new and practical experimental technique for studying the Doppler effect where the pitch variation of noise from a passing aircraft is used to calculate its speed.
Descriptors: Measurement Techniques, Acoustics, Air Transportation, Science Instruction
Greenslade, Thomas B., Jr. – Physics Teacher, 2007
An attention-grabbing center-of-mass demonstration uses the map of a state mounted on a sheet of heavy cardboard and cut out along the boundaries. The two-dimensional object is hung from a hole punched into a city near the edge, and a string with a pendulum bob attached to it passes through the center of mass. The process is repeated with a…
Descriptors: Demonstrations (Educational), Computation, Maps, Physics
Heavers, Richard M. – Physics Teacher, 2007
Our students like using the covers of their TI graphing calculators in an inquiry-based extension of a traditional exercise that challenges their preconceived ideas about friction. Biology major Fiona McGraw (Fig. 1) is obviously excited about the large coefficient of static friction ([mu][subscript s] = 1.3) for the four little rubber feet on her…
Descriptors: Mechanics (Physics), Graphing Calculators, Scientific Principles, Inquiry
Adams, Al – Physics Teacher, 2007
Permanent magnets have long been used in both traditional laboratory exercises and in inquiry-based learning activities. These pedagogical applications are typically timed to correspond to the early coverage of magnetism in the second-semester sequence of introductory physics. At the initial level the concepts relate to the magnetic field of the…
Descriptors: Physics, Magnets, Motion, Scientific Principles
Iyer, Chandru; Prabhu, G. M. – European Journal of Physics, 2007
Sometimes it becomes a matter of natural choice for an observer (A) that he prefers a coordinate system of two-dimensional spatial x-y coordinates from which he observes another observer (B) who is moving at a uniform speed along a line of motion, which is not collinear with A's chosen x- or y-axis. It becomes necessary in such cases to develop…
Descriptors: Algebra, Motion, Science Instruction, Physics
Thompson, Stephen – Journal of College Science Teaching, 2007
This set of botany demonstrations is a continuation of the inquiry-based lecture activities that provide realistic connections to the history and nature of science and employ technology in data collection. The demonstrations also provide examples of inquiry-based teaching practices in the life sciences. (Contains 5 figures.) [For Part 1, see…
Descriptors: Student Evaluation, Scientific Principles, Botany, Sciences
Hilgeman, Fred R.; Bertrand, Gary; Wilson, Brent – Journal of Chemical Education, 2007
This experiment, designed for a general chemistry laboratory, illustrates the use of Dalton's law of partial pressures to determine the vapor pressure of a volatile liquid. A predetermined volume of air is injected into a calibrated tube filled with a liquid whose vapor pressure is to be measured. The volume of the liquid displaced is greater than…
Descriptors: Chemistry, Scientific Principles, Science Instruction, Laboratory Experiments
Torres, Emilio Martinez – Journal of Chemical Education, 2007
This article develops a general thermodynamic treatment to predict the direction of shift in a chemical equilibrium when it is subjected to a stress. This treatment gives an inequality that relates the change in the perturbed variable and the change that the equilibrium shift produces in the conjugated variable. To illustrate the generality of…
Descriptors: Thermodynamics, Chemistry, Scientific Principles, College Science
Straits, William J.; Nichols, Sharon E. – Journal of Science Teacher Education, 2007
Explicit instruction of the nature of science (NOS) may be problematic if the NOS is portrayed as either a solely a cognitive or discursive endeavor, overlooking other aspects of epistemology, such as aesthetic ways of knowing. Here the aesthetic stance refers to individual's responses during reading as they create links between the text and their…
Descriptors: Elementary School Science, Scientific Principles, Science Teachers, Epistemology

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