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Presas i Puig, Albert – Annals of Science, 2008
The aim of this paper is to analyse the scientific relations between Germany and Spain during the Entente Boycott (1919-1926) and the German academic policy that fostered it. The study of the international relations of German science during the 1920s has been carried out using as a basis the archives of scientific institutions. Personal…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, International Relations, Scientists, Interprofessional Relationship
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Sevian, Hannah; Gonsalves, Lisa – International Journal of Science Education, 2008
The present article presents a rubric we developed for assessing the quality of scientific explanations by science graduate students. The rubric was developed from a qualitative analysis of science graduate students' abilities to explain their own research to an audience of non-scientists. Our intention is that use of the rubric to characterise…
Descriptors: Sciences, Graduate Students, Qualitative Research, Scientific Research
Guterman, Lila – Chronicle of Higher Education, 2008
This article reports on firebomb attacks at the homes of two animal researchers which have provoked anger and unease. The firebomb attacks, which set the home of a neuroscientist at the University of California at Santa Cruz aflame and destroyed a car parked in the driveway of another university researcher's home, have left researchers and…
Descriptors: Animals, Public Support, Researchers, Scientific Research
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Stansfield, William D. – American Biology Teacher, 2008
Gregor Mendel (1822-1884) is rightly credited as being the "father of modern genetics." He presented the results of his pea experiments at a meeting of his local natural history society in two lectures during 1865. His paper was published in the proceedings of the society the next year. From his breeding experiments with the edible pea, he…
Descriptors: Genetics, Teaching Methods, Science Instruction, Biology
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Clary, Renee; Wandersee, James; Carpinelli, Amy – Science Scope, 2008
In the 19th century, the race to uncover dinosaur fossils and name new dinosaur species inspired two rival scientists, Edward Drinker Cope and Othniel Charles Marsh, to behave in ways that were the antithesis of scientific methods. Subterfuge, theft, and espionage were the ingredients of the Great Dinosaur Feud. Because students often enjoy…
Descriptors: Science Education, United States History, Student Motivation, Competition
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Gray, Kara E.; Adams, Wendy K.; Wieman, Carl E.; Perkins, Katherine K. – Physical Review Special Topics - Physics Education Research, 2008
We measured what students perceive physicists to believe about physics and solving physics problems and how those perceptions differ from the students' personal beliefs. In this study, we used a modified version of the Colorado Learning Attitudes about Science Survey which asked students to respond to each statement with both their personal belief…
Descriptors: Student Attitudes, Physics, Scientists, Scientific Attitudes
Baxter, Kathleen B. – ProQuest LLC, 2010
As a result of the underrepresentation of women in science and engineering programs, the culture is male-dominated and perpetuates an unsupportive and biased climate that discourages undergraduate women from connecting to their gender. Using a social identity framework, this study addresses how gender influences undergraduate women's perception of…
Descriptors: Women Scientists, Focus Groups, Science Careers, Engineering
Lehming, Rolf F.; Alt, Martha Naomi; Chen, Xianglei; Hall, Leslie; Burton, Lawrence; Burrelli, Joan S.; Kannankutty, Nirmala; Proudfoot, Steven; Regets, Mark C.; Boroush, Mark; Moris, Francisco A.; Wolfe, Raymond M.; Britt, Ronda; Christovich, Leslie; Hill, Derek; Falkenheim, Jaquelina C.; Dunnigan, Paula C. – National Science Foundation, 2010
"Science and Engineering Indicators" (SEI) is first and foremost a volume of record comprising the major high-quality quantitative data on the U.S. and international science and engineering enterprise. SEI is factual and policy neutral. It does not offer policy options, and it does not make policy recommendations. SEI employs a variety…
Descriptors: Statistical Data, Engineering, Sciences, Elementary Secondary Education
Herbert, Doug, Ed. – US Department of Education, 2010
The purpose of the U.S. Department of Education's online newsletter "The Education Innovator" is to promote innovative practices in education; to offer features on promising programs and practices; to provide information on innovative research, schools, policies, and trends; and to keep readers informed of key Department priorities and…
Descriptors: Human Capital, Science Achievement, Science Education, Technology Education
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Duncan Seraphin, Kanesa – School Science and Mathematics, 2010
This article describes the methods and impact of a student-teacher-scientist research partnership on student attitudes. The partnership objective was to teach students about the diverse roles of sharks in the marine environment while personally connecting students with scientific study. Students (N = 229) participated in lessons about shark…
Descriptors: Student Attitudes, Student Surveys, Marine Biology, Scientists
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Wai, Jonathan; Cacchio, Megan; Putallaz, Martha; Makel, Matthew C. – Intelligence, 2010
One factor in the debate surrounding the underrepresentation of women in science technology, engineering and mathematics (STEM) involves male-female mathematical ability differences in the extreme right tail (top 1% in ability). The present study provides male-female ability ratios from over 1.6 million 7th grade students in the right tail (top 5%…
Descriptors: Women Scientists, Academic Achievement, Disproportionate Representation, Writing Ability
Bargerhuff, Mary Ellen; Wheatly, Michele – Teacher Education and Special Education, 2004
Scientists love a good problem. Curious and persistent by nature, scientists will admire a problem and tease it until the original enigma becomes another building block in the ever-growing complex of understanding. This propensity toward problem solving is what led a group of scientists at Wright State University (WSU) to develop an innovative…
Descriptors: Scientists, Laboratories
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Gobbo, Francesca – Intercultural Education, 2004
The article presents a portrait of the late anthropologist John U. Ogbu through the author's personal recollections of him as a social scientist, a teacher, a colleague and a longtime friend.
Descriptors: Social Scientists
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Heering, Peter – Science & Education, 2007
One of those who failed to establish himself as a natural philosopher in 18th century Paris was the future revolutionary Jean Paul Marat. He did not only publish several monographs on heat, optics and electricity in which he attempted to characterise his work as being purely empirical but he also tried to establish himself as a public lecturer.…
Descriptors: Science History, Scientific Concepts, Scientists, Science Experiments
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Erlichson, Herman – Physics Teacher, 2007
The overwhelming majority of important papers in physics are written by physicists. But the physician Julius Robert Mayer (1814-1878, see photo) did a valid theoretical calculation of the mechanical equivalent of heat just before Joule reported on his results from his well-known paddle-wheel experiments. Joule is well-known to physics people and…
Descriptors: Physics, Laboratory Experiments, Energy, Science Instruction
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