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Hinshaw, Craig – School Arts: The Art Education Magazine for Teachers, 2005
For thousands of years, the three perfections--painting, poetry, and calligraphy--have been considered the mark of an enlightened person throughout Asian cultures. Fifth-grade students learned about these three hallmarks by studying three works from the Detroit Institute of Art's Asian collection: a nineteenth-century Japanese hand scroll, a…
Descriptors: Grade 5, Visualization, Poetry, Art Education
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Totten, Iris – Science Scope, 2005
Teaching Earth science without exposure to rock outcrops limits students depth of understanding of Earth's processes, limits the concept of scale from their spatial visualization imaging, and distorts their perception of geologic time (Totten 2003). Through a grant funded by the National Science Foundation, an artificial rock outcrop was…
Descriptors: Visualization, Spatial Ability, Geology, Earth Science
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Hegarty, Mary; Kriz, Sarah; Cate, Christina – Cognition and Instruction, 2003
The effects of computer animations and mental animation on people's mental models of a mechanical system are examined. In 3 experiments, students learned how a mechanical system works from various instructional treatments including viewing a static diagram of the machine, predicting motion from static diagrams, viewing computer animations, and…
Descriptors: Visualization, Motion, Learning Theories, Spatial Ability
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Huk, T. – Journal of Computer Assisted Learning, 2006
Empirical studies that focus on the impact of three-dimensional (3D) visualizations on learning are to date rare and inconsistent. According to the ability-as-enhancer hypothesis, high spatial ability learners should benefit particularly as they have enough cognitive capacity left for mental model construction. In contrast, the…
Descriptors: Memory, Cytology, Spatial Ability, Models
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Lin-Chih-Lung; Dwyer, Francis – International Journal of Instructional Media, 2004
The purpose of this study was to examine the instructional effectiveness of computer animated instruction, complemented by varied types of instructional strategies (advance organizers and adjunct questions and feedback) on learner achievement of different types of educational objectives. Ninety-three undergraduate students were randomly assigned…
Descriptors: Educational Objectives, Animation, Computer Assisted Instruction, Visualization
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Ragsdale, Frances R. – American Biology Teacher, 2004
An enzyme exercise to address the problem of students inability to visualize chemical reaction at the molecular level is described. This exercise is designed as a dry lab exercise but can be modified into a classroom activity then can be augmented by a wet lab procedure, thereby providing students with a practical exposure to enzyme function.
Descriptors: Biochemistry, Molecular Biology, Visualization, Class Activities
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Zarzycki, Piotr – Teaching Mathematics and Its Applications: An International Journal of the IMA, 2004
The benefits of visualizing mathematics by using technology such as TI-92+ and mathematically oriented software (DERIVE 5 and CABRI II) are indisputable. On the basis of some examples we would like to show that visualizing techniques can help students to analyse certain mathematical problems better and give them strong support in finding formal…
Descriptors: Probability, Educational Technology, Algebra, Geometry
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Reiner, Miriam – Interchange: A Quarterly Review of Education, 2006
This paper takes a cognitive perspective in an attempt to analyze mental mechanisms involved in contextual learning. In the following, it is suggested that contextualized environments evoke mental mechanisms that support reasoning about "what if", imaginary situations--utilizing a powerful mental mechanism known from the history of physics as…
Descriptors: Physics, Thinking Skills, Memory, Schemata (Cognition)
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Barbera, Jack; Adams, Wendy K.; Wieman, Carl E.; Perkins, Katherine K. – Journal of Chemical Education, 2008
The chemistry version of the Colorado Learning Attitudes about Science Survey (CLASS-Chem) is a new instrument designed to measure students' (novices') beliefs about chemistry and learning chemistry compared to those of experts (instructors). This survey is intended to measure the effects of students' beliefs on learning, and to understand how…
Descriptors: Interests, Chemistry, Educational Practices, Teaching Methods
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Stavridou, Fotini; Kakana, Domna – Educational Research, 2008
Background: The study investigated a small range of cognitive abilities, related to visual-spatial intelligence, in adolescents. This specific range of cognitive abilities was termed "graphic abilities" and defined as a range of abilities to visualise and think in three dimensions, originating in the domain of visual-spatial…
Descriptors: Intelligence, Adolescents, Visual Perception, Foreign Countries
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Marshall, Julia – Studies in Art Education: A Journal of Issues and Research in Art Education, 2007
"Art practice as research" casts artmaking as inquiry--as a particularly experiential and constructivist process of learning in which imaginative synthesis and creative image making are ways of constructing knowledge. This article explores how artmaking functions as research through the creation of visual images, especially images that picture…
Descriptors: Art Activities, Art Expression, Research, Visual Arts
Blackburn, Barbara R.; Womack, Jason W. – Principal Leadership, 2007
In this article, the author discusses three steps that will help administrators build a system that allows them to bring balance back into their life. The first step is to create a picture of how things could be, because real change always comes from the inside. The second step is adjusting their attitude. Controlling their attitude is as…
Descriptors: Principals, Attitude Change, Administrator Attitudes, Time Management
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Taylor, M.; Pountney, D.; Malabar, I. – Journal of Further and Higher Education, 2007
Mathematics can be perceived as being a difficult subject to learn due to the conceptual leaps required to understand particular mathematical topics. In some areas of mathematics, part of the difficulty may be associated with applying sufficient imagination to visualize a particular mathematical concept, and applying sufficient visio-spatial…
Descriptors: Mathematical Concepts, Animation, Mathematics Instruction, Teaching Methods
Ganguly, Indrani – 1995
It is important to incorporate visual thinking into science instruction. Imagination and perception play vital roles in scientific inquiry. Metaphors, like perceptions, are drawn from common experiences and are a means to anchor scientists' thought processes in generating a pattern that bridges the gap between the seen and the unseen. Metaphors…
Descriptors: Analogy, Concept Formation, Epistemology, Imagination
Galindo, Enrique – 1995
The relationship between college students' preferred mode of processing mathematical information--visual or nonvisual--and their performance in calculus classes with and without technology was investigated. Students elected one of three different versions of an introductory differential calculus course: using graphing calculators, using the…
Descriptors: Calculus, College Mathematics, College Students, Educational Technology
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