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Showing 4,051 to 4,065 of 5,614 results Save | Export
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Cetin, Gulcan – Asia-Pacific Forum on Science Learning and Teaching, 2007
This study aimed to describe seventh grade English and Turkish students' levels of understanding of decomposition. Data were analyzed descriptively from the students' written responses to four diagnostic questions about decomposition. Results revealed that the English students had considerably higher sound understanding and lower no understanding…
Descriptors: Scientific Principles, Ecology, Scientific Concepts, Grade 7
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Pennock, Robert T. – McGill Journal of Education, 2007
Because evolution in natural systems happens so slowly, it is difficult to design inquiry-based labs where students can experiment and observe evolution in the way they can when studying other phenomena. New research in evolutionary computation and artificial life provides a solution to this problem. This paper describes a new A-Life software…
Descriptors: Undergraduate Students, Scientific Principles, Computer Software, Evolution
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Zucker, Andrew A.; King, Karen E. – Science Teacher, 2009
The declining cost of computers and wireless networks has made laptop programs more affordable than ever. At the same time, the internet resources available to teachers and students have grown exponentially in the 15 years since web browsers first became practical. As a result of these trends, growing numbers of students nationwide are provided…
Descriptors: Computer Uses in Education, Internet, Computer Networks, Teaching Methods
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Cros, Ana; Ferrer-Roca, Chantal – Physics Teacher, 2006
There are a number of ways of exciting standing waves in ropes and springs using non-commercial vibrators such as loudspeakers, jigsaws, motors, or a simple tuning fork, including the rhythmical shaking of a handheld Slinky. We have come up with a very simple and cheap way of exciting stationary waves in a string, which anyone, particularly…
Descriptors: Scientific Concepts, Physics, Motion, Science Experiments
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Gluck, Paul – Physics Teacher, 2006
Science museums and popular physics shows often exhibit a blower in whose air stream a ball is held hovering in equilibrium some distance above the jet's orifice. The weight of the ball, "mg," is balanced by the drag force of the turbulent air stream, often written as ?Cv[superscript 2]A, where "?" and "v" are the…
Descriptors: Museums, Physics, Kinetics, Exhibits
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Alexander, Patricia A. – Educational Psychologist, 2006
What follows is the presentation given after receiving the E. L. Thorndike Career Achievement in Educational Psychology from Division 15 of the American Psychological Association. This presentation calls for greater respect for and attention to scientific speculation in educational psychology as a critical component in theory development and model…
Descriptors: Learning Theories, Case Studies, Educational Psychology, Models
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Clough, Michael P. – Science & Education, 2006
Much has been written about how effective nature of science instruction must have a significant explicit and reflective character. However, while explicitly drawing students' attention to NOS issues is crucial, learning and teaching the NOS are essentially matters of conceptual change. In this article, how people learn and learners' responses to…
Descriptors: Scientific Principles, Misconceptions, Science Instruction, Teaching Methods
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Zou, Xueli; Dietz, Eric; McGuire, Trevor; Fox, Louise; Norris, Tiara; Diamond, Brendan; Chavez, Ricardo; Cheng, Stephen – Physics Teacher, 2008
Since Robert Millikan discovered the quantization of electric charge and measured its fundamental value over 90 years ago, his oil-drop experiment has become essential in physics laboratory classes at both the high school and college level. As physics instructors, however, many of us have used the traditional setup and experienced the tedium of…
Descriptors: Photography, Physics, Laboratory Equipment, Motion
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Bianchini, Julie A. – Cultural Studies of Science Education, 2008
This article examines Mary Budd Rowe's groundbreaking and far-reaching contributions to science education. Rowe is best known for her research on wait-time: the idea that teachers can improve the quality and length of classroom discussions by waiting at least 3 s before and after student responses. Her wait-time research grew from and helped…
Descriptors: Elementary School Teachers, Science Education, Inquiry, Teaching Methods
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Tenenbaum, Harriet R.; Callanan, Maureen A. – International Journal of Behavioral Development, 2008
Everyday parent-child conversations may support children's scientific understanding. The types and frequency of parent-child science talk may vary with the cultural and schooling background of the participants, and yet most research in the USA focuses on highly schooled European-American families. This study investigated 40 Mexican-descent…
Descriptors: Language Usage, Spanish Speaking, Speech Communication, Mexican Americans
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Plumb, Robert C. – Journal of Chemical Education, 1975
Presents an approach to the understanding of gas laws using such common phenomena as insect fogging, sea breezes, and hot air balloons. (GS)
Descriptors: Chemistry, Instructional Materials, Kinetics, Science Education
KOELSCHE, CHARLES L.; MORGAN, ASHLEY G. – 1964
RESEARCH WAS CONDUCTED TO ESTABLISH THE DEGREE OF SCIENTIFIC KNOWLEDGE THAT IS REQUIRED TO UNDERSTAND SCIENCE ARTICLES IN CURRENT NEWSPAPERS AND MAGAZINES. ALL ARTICLES ABOUT SCIENCE OR REQUIRING SCIENCE FOR INTERPRETATION WERE COLLECTED FOR A 6-MONTH PERIOD FROM NINE MAGAZINES AND 22 NEWSPAPERS. TERMS WERE CATEGORIZED AND RELATED TO THE…
Descriptors: Concept Formation, General Education, Literacy, Reading
Bearden, Thomas E. – 1975
This document presents a discussion and conceptual derivation of Einstein's postulates of special relativity. The perceptron approach appears to be a fundamentally new manner of regarding physical phenomena and it is hoped that physicists will interest themselves in the concept. (Author)
Descriptors: Models, Perception, Physical Sciences, Physics
Watson, Sam, Jr. – 1974
The focus of this paper is on Michael Polanyi, a contemporary scientist and philosopher, and on some general features which are embedded in rhetorical theory's traditional bases and contemporary manifestations and which are seen from Polanyi's vantage point. The author discusses the basic features which undergird rhetorical theories and are…
Descriptors: Rhetoric, Rhetorical Criticism, Scientific Attitudes, Scientific Methodology
Ganz, Joan Safran – 1971
Rules in this study are limited to linguistic entities which are said to have truth value, to be followable and prescriptive, to have been adopted and remain in force until unadopted, and to be conditional. The concern is with the nominal referential use of rules rather than their verbal use. The book is divided into four sections. The first…
Descriptors: Descriptive Linguistics, Games, Language Patterns, Language Universals
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