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Peer reviewedMatthews, Robert A. J. – School Science Review, 2001
Discusses the urban myth that "If toast can land butter-side down, it will" as an example of a source of projects demonstrating the use of the scientific method beyond its usual settings. Other urban myths suitable for investigation are discussed. (Author/MM)
Descriptors: Elementary Secondary Education, Science Activities, Science and Society, Science Education
Roy, Ken – Science Scope, 2005
Model rocketry is one of the best ways to get students interested in the physical sciences. Following safety guidelines, rocketry can really turn students on to science and also help them understand the applications of theories and scientific principles (Newton's laws of motion, force, mass, projectile motion, etc.) they are learning. The study…
Descriptors: Scientific Principles, Physical Sciences, Motion, Physics
Rudolph, John L. – Science Education, 2005
Two seemingly complementary trends stand out currently in school science education in the United States: one is the increased emphasis on inquiry activities in classrooms, and the other is the high level of attention given to student understanding of the nature of science. This essay looks at the range of activities that fall within the first…
Descriptors: Educational Trends, Inquiry, Science Activities, Classroom Environment
Peer reviewedGoodwin, Thomas E. – Journal of Chemical Education, 2004
Green chemistry is the utilization of a set of principles that reduces or eliminates the use or generation of hazardous substances in the design, manufacture and application of chemical products. Some of the philosophical questions and practical decisions that have guided the greening of the organic chemistry laboratory at Hendrix College in…
Descriptors: Organic Chemistry, Science Laboratories, Science Experiments, Hazardous Materials
Peer reviewedGonzalez, Gabriel; Seco, Miquel – Journal of Chemical Education, 2004
The potassium salt is an easy product to synthesize in an introductory course on inorganic chemistry and the students are required to prepare this product in order to improve their laboratory skills and as an introduction to the synthesis of coordination compounds. The complex potassium tris (oxalato) ferrate (III) is used to illustrate the…
Descriptors: Introductory Courses, Inorganic Chemistry, College Students, Scientific Principles
Student Understanding of the Nature of Science and Their Problem-Solving Strategies. Research Report
Lin, Huann-Shyang; Chiu, Houn-Lin; Chou, Ching-Yang – International Journal of Science Education, 2004
The purpose of this study was to examine the relationship between student understanding of the nature of science and their problem-solving strategies. Six hundred and twenty Year 8 students in Taiwan twice completed two conceptual problem-solving tests and a questionnaire on the nature of science. Four of these students were selected for follow-up…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Scientific Principles, Scientific Methodology, Problem Solving
Sadler, Troy D.; Chambers, William F.; Zeidler, Dana L. – International Journal of Science Education, 2004
This study investigates student conceptualizations of the nature of science (NOS) and how students interpret and evaluate conflicting evidence regarding a socioscientific issue. Eighty-four high school students participated in the study by reading contradictory reports about the status of global warming and responding to questions designed to…
Descriptors: Scientific Principles, Data Interpretation, Climate, Science Education
Crawford, Barbara A.; Cullin, Michael J. – International Journal of Science Education, 2004
This study investigated prospective secondary science teachers' understandings of and intentions to teach about scientific modelling in the context of a model-based instructional module. Qualitative methods were used to explore the influence of instruction using dynamic computer modelling. Participants included 14 secondary science prospective…
Descriptors: Science Teachers, Scientific Principles, Teacher Education, Science Instruction
Besson, Ugo – International Journal of Science Education, 2004
This article describes a research study concerning students' conceptions and reasonings about fluids and pressure in static situations. After a preliminary survey involving interviews and observations in class, some written questions were answered by various groups, totalling 428 Italian and French pupils in upper secondary school, 458 first-year…
Descriptors: Scientific Principles, Foreign Countries, Secondary Education, Higher Education
Matthews, Michael R. – Science & Education, 2004
Galileo's discovery of the properties of pendulum motion depended on his adoption of the novel methodology of idealisation. Galileo's laws of pendulum motion could not be accepted until the empiricist methodological constraints placed on science by Aristotle, and by common sense, were overturned. As long as scientific claims were judged by how the…
Descriptors: Scientific Principles, Physics, Laboratory Equipment, Motion
Raftopoulos, Athanasios; Kalyfommatou, Niki; Constantinou, Constantinos P. – Science & Education, 2005
The history of science shows that for each scientific issue there may be more than one models that are simultaneously accepted by the scientific community. One such case concerns the wave and corpuscular models of light. Newton claimed that he had proved some properties of light based on a set of minimal assumptions, without any commitments to any…
Descriptors: Optics, Science Instruction, Scientific Principles, Light
Rieber, Lloyd P.; Tzeng, Shyh-Chii; Tribble, Kelly – Learning and Instruction, 2004
The purpose of this research was to explore how adult users interact and learn during an interactive computer-based simulation supplemented with brief multimedia explanations of the content. A total of 52 college students interacted with a computer-based simulation of Newton's laws of motion in which they had control over the motion of a simple…
Descriptors: Discovery Learning, Computer Simulation, Multimedia Instruction, College Students
Peer reviewedEick, Charles; Meadows, Lee; Balkcom, Rebecca – Science Teacher, 2005
For science teachers, implementing inquiry for the first time can seem intimidating. Inquiry-based curriculum requires teachers to design experiences that engage students in scientific phenomena through direct observation, data gathering, and analysis of evidence. Replacing familiar routines and conventional methods with inquiry may seem outside…
Descriptors: Scaffolding (Teaching Technique), Inquiry, Science Teachers, Science Curriculum
Copeland, Peter; Parsons, Keith – Academic Questions, 2004
University of Chicago literary critic W.J.T. Mitchell claims that his contribution to the cultural interpretation and hermeneutic understanding of dinosaurs is every bit as valuable as archeological discoveries. Indeed, he holds that, because of his new way of looking at dinosaurs, the title "scientist" should aptly apply to him, too.…
Descriptors: Physical Environment, Paleontology, Postmodernism, Scientific Principles
Sharma, Prince; D'Souza, David R.; Bhandari, Deepali; Parashar, Vijay; Capalash, Neena – Biochemistry and Molecular Biology Education, 2003
Restriction enzymes are basic tools in recombinant DNA technology. To shape the molecular biology experiments, the students must know how to work with these molecular scissors. Here, we describe an integrated set of experiments, introduced in the "Advances in Molecular Biology and Biotechnology" postgraduate course, which covers the important…
Descriptors: Molecular Biology, Biotechnology, Genetics, Scientific Principles

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