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Hadjichristidis, Constantinos; Sloman, Steven; Stevenson, Rosemary; Over, David – Cognitive Science, 2004
A feature is central to a concept to the extent that other features depend on it. Four studies tested the hypothesis that people will project a feature from a base concept to a target concept to the extent that they believe the feature is central to the two concepts. This centrality hypothesis implies that feature projection is guided by a…
Descriptors: Logical Thinking, Concept Formation, Inferences, Classification
Brown, Reva Berman; McCartney, Sean – Education & Training, 2003
Defines two competitive ideas--competence and capability--and argues that neither deals adequately with the central issue of the present. Provides a model, to place these ideas in conceptual space--the vertical axis of which is bounded by the extremes of narrow and broad focus, and the horizontal axis by the past and the future. Suggests that…
Descriptors: Vocational Education, Competence, Ability, Concept Formation
Perkins, Michael R.; Dobbinson, Sushie; Boucher, Jill; Bol, Simone; Bloom, Paul – Journal of Autism and Developmental Disorders, 2006
One aspect of autistic language that has been infrequently researched is vocabulary and the conceptual knowledge underpinning individual words or word types. In this descriptive study we investigate anomalous vocabulary use in a 70,000-word corpus of conversational autistic language and examine evidence that concept formation, and hence…
Descriptors: Concept Formation, Autism, Vocabulary Skills, Vocabulary
Arthurs, Leilani; Templeton, Alexis – Journal of Geoscience Education, 2009
Interactive engagement pedagogies that emerge from a constructivist model of teaching and learning are often a challenge to implement in larger classes for a number of reasons including the physical layout of the classroom (e.g. fixed chairs in an amphitheater-style room), the logistics of organizing a large number of students into small…
Descriptors: Geology, College Science, Science Instruction, Environmental Education
Jennifer Tennille Pinder Ellis – ProQuest LLC, 2009
This study was designed to evaluate the effects of the proprietary science education software, "Conversionoes," on students' conceptual and visual understanding of dimensional analysis. The participants in the study were high school general chemistry students enrolled in two public high schools with different demographics (School A and…
Descriptors: High School Students, Secondary School Science, Chemistry, Concept Formation
White, Stephanie – Journal of Education for Teaching: International Research and Pedagogy, 2009
Student teachers studying to become primary school teachers in New Zealand can spend up to 24 weeks on professional teaching practice in schools. This paper describes a model (based on the Conversational Framework by Laurillard), developed after conducting an action research study requiring critical reflection on the practice of giving feedback to…
Descriptors: Feedback (Response), Preservice Teacher Education, Student Teachers, Action Research
Aldahmash, Abdulwali H.; Abraham, Michael R. – Journal of Chemical Education, 2009
Using animated computer-generated graphics to assist instruction has recently attracted the attention of educators and educational researchers. The specific focus of this study is to compare the influence of animated visuals with static visuals on college students' understanding of organic reaction mechanisms in chemistry. This study also focuses…
Descriptors: College Students, Kinetics, Organic Chemistry, Correlation
Steer, Jessica; de Vila, Maria Antonieta; Eaton, James – Mathematics Teaching, 2009
This final article focuses in particular on the engagement of year 8 students who were taught trigonometry using dynamic geometry software ("Geometer's SketchPad"), as outlined in "MT214" and with resources from the ATM website. The project was implemented in three different classrooms in two different, multiracial,…
Descriptors: Trigonometry, Mathematics Instruction, Teaching Methods, Mathematics Activities
Tsaparlis, Georgios; Papaphotis, Georgios – International Journal of Science Education, 2009
This study tested for deep understanding and critical thinking about basic quantum chemical concepts taught at 12th grade (age 17-18). Our aim was to achieve conceptual change in students. A quantitative study was conducted first (n = 125), and following this 23 selected students took part in semi-structured interviews either individually or in…
Descriptors: Constructivism (Learning), Rote Learning, Chemistry, Interviews
Offer, Joey; Mireles, Selina Vasquez – School Science and Mathematics, 2009
This paper defines correlation, describes the Mix It Up program, discusses the teachers' beliefs about the value of correlating mathematics and science prior to program participation, and identifies problems teachers associated with correlation before and during the program. Teachers' beliefs about the value of correlation and about the problems…
Descriptors: Program Evaluation, Methods, Teacher Attitudes, Mathematics Education
Blanchard, Margaret R.; Southerland, Sherry A.; Granger, Ellen M. – Science Education, 2009
Inquiry is seen as central to the reform of science teaching and learning, but few teachers have experience with scientific inquiry and thus possess very naive conceptions of it. One promising form of professional development, research experiences for teachers (RETs), allows teachers to experience scientific inquiry in the hopes that these…
Descriptors: Ecology, Educational Change, Science Teachers, Faculty Development
Paz, Tamar; Leron, Uri – Journal for Research in Mathematics Education, 2009
Functions are all around us, disguised as actions on concrete objects. Composition of functions, too, is all around us, because these actions can be performed in succession, the output of one serving as the input for the next. In terms of Gray and Tall's (2001) "embodied objects" or Lakoff and Nunez's (2000) "mathematical idea…
Descriptors: Concept Formation, Mathematics Instruction, Mathematical Concepts, Algebra
Reiner, Miriam – International Journal of Science Education, 2009
Bodily manipulations, such as juggling, suggest a well-synchronized physical interaction as if the person were a physics expert. The juggler uses "knowledge" that is rooted in bodily experience, to interact with the environment. Such enacted bodily knowledge is powerful, efficient, predictive, and relates to sensory perception of the dynamics of…
Descriptors: Cues, Physics, Interaction, Science Instruction
Gierdien, Faaiz – South African Journal of Education, 2008
I report on what teachers in an Advanced Certificate in Education (ACE) inservice programme learned about probabilistic reasoning in relation to teaching it. I worked "on the inside" using my practice as a site for studying teaching and learning. The teachers were from three different towns in the Northern Cape province and had limited…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Probability, Thinking Skills, Inservice Teacher Education
Tunnicliffe, Sue Dale; Gatt, Suzanne; Agius, Catherine; Pizzuto, Sue Anne – EURASIA Journal of Mathematics, Science & Technology Education, 2008
Young Maltese children have experience and knowledge of animals. We explored the range of animal with which they are familiar and the origin of this knowledge. The children interviewed were in Pre School, aged 4 years, and in the first year of compulsory education, aged 5 years Verb l questions and photographs were used as the probe to access…
Descriptors: Animals, Visual Aids, Foreign Countries, Young Children

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