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Peer reviewedMorgan, Kelly – Science Teacher, 2000
Presents a science experiment in which students test the buffering capacity of household products such as shampoo, hand lotion, fizzies candy, and cola. Lists the standards addressed in this experiment and gives an example of a student lab write-up. (YDS)
Descriptors: Acids, Active Learning, Chemical Reactions, Chemistry
Peer reviewedThangiah, Sam R.; Joshi, Sharad W. – Journal of Computers in Mathematics and Science Teaching, 1997
Outlines how a course in robotics can be taught at the undergraduate level with specific experiments that can be used for incremental learning in programming a mobile robot or by simulating the actions of a robot. Contains 14 references. (Author/ASK)
Descriptors: Course Descriptions, Educational Technology, Higher Education, Mathematics Education
Peer reviewedRoser, Charles E.; McCluskey, Catherine L. – Journal of Chemical Education, 1999
Describes a variation of typical introductory chemistry stoichiometry experiments in which the reaction is run in a modified 20-ounce plastic soda bottle. (WRM)
Descriptors: Chemical Reactions, Chemistry, Higher Education, Instructional Materials
Parisi, A. V.; Mottram, K.; Kimlin, M. G.; Wilson, M.; Wollstein, A. – Australian Science Teachers' Journal, 1999
Describes a simple time-of-flight experiment using readily available equipment. The method of measuring the speed of light uses a modulated laser and introduces students to some concepts of optics, measurement of very small time intervals, modulation of lasers, waveform generation, fast detectors, and data processing. (Contains 20 references.)…
Descriptors: High Schools, Higher Education, Lasers, Light
Peer reviewedJameson, Bill – Physics Teacher, 1999
Describes modifications to an apparatus for measuring the force of an object in circular motion. Explains how to accurately measure rotation rate with the use of a motion detector. (WRM)
Descriptors: Acceleration (Physics), Force, Higher Education, Motion
Peer reviewedParkash, Brahm; Kumar, Ashwani – School Science Review, 1999
Reports on a technique for illustrating the dependence of the rate of reaction on the concentration of the reactants and for determining the order of reaction with respect to each reactant, the overall order of reaction, the reaction rate constant, and the half-life. (WRM)
Descriptors: Chemical Reactions, Chemistry, Demonstrations (Science), Higher Education
Peer reviewedSilverman, Mark P.; Silverman, Christopher R. – Physics Teacher, 2000
Discusses the history of the development of Newton's Law of Cooling. Describes an experiment conducted in the kitchen that is designed to test the rate of cooling of a hot block of iron. Finds that Newton's law does not represent very well the mechanism of heat loss. (Contains over 10 references.) (WRM)
Descriptors: Heat, Higher Education, Mathematical Models, Physics
VanCleave, Janice – CSTA Journal, 2000
Uses charcoal briquettes, ammonia, water, table salt, and laundry bluing to create white fluffy crystals. Briquettes are placed in a bowl while the remaining ingredients are mixed together and poured over the briquettes. The result is white fluffy crystals forming on top of the charcoal. This experiment dramatizes chemical reactions to…
Descriptors: Chemical Reactions, Chemistry, Demonstrations (Science), Elementary School Science
Del Carlo, Dawn; Bodner, George – Biochemistry and Molecular Biology Education, 2006
Although reports of academic cheating are abundant, there are relatively few papers in the literature that focus on cheating in the context of science courses and even fewer that address dishonest practices, such as "cooking" or fudging data, within the classroom laboratory. This paper briefly reviews the existing literature on academic dishonesty…
Descriptors: Laboratories, Biochemistry, Molecular Biology, Cheating
McReynolds, Katherine D. – Biochemistry and Molecular Biology Education, 2006
A second semester biochemistry laboratory has been implemented as an independent projects course at California State University, Sacramento since 1999. To incorporate aspects of carbohydrate biochemistry, or glycobiology, into our curriculum, projects in lectin isolation and purification were undertaken over the course of two semesters. Through…
Descriptors: Biochemistry, Student Projects, Undergraduate Study, Advanced Courses
Sommer, Cesar Adolfo; Silva, Flavio Henrique; Novo, Maria Teresa Marques – Biochemistry and Molecular Biology Education, 2004
Practical classes on protein expression and purification were given to undergraduate biology students enrolled in the elective course "Introduction to Genetic Engineering." The heterologous expression of the green fluorescent protein (GFP)* of "Aequorea victoria" is an interesting system for didactic purposes because it can be viewed easily during…
Descriptors: Laboratory Experiments, Molecular Biology, Genetics, Engineering
Hodgson, Ted; Andersen, Lyle; Robison-Cox, Jim; Jones, Clain – Teaching Statistics: An International Journal for Teachers, 2004
Water quality experiments, especially the use of macroinvertebrates as indicators of water quality, offer an ideal context for connecting statistics and science. In the STAR program for secondary students and teachers, water quality experiments were also used as a context for teaching statistics. In this article, we trace one activity that uses…
Descriptors: Water Quality, Statistics, Secondary Education, Secondary School Science
Stafford, Erin – Science & Education, 2004
Inhelder and Piaget (1958) studied schoolchildren's understanding of a simple pendulum as a means of investigating the development of the control of variables scheme and the "ceteris paribus" principle central to scientific experimentation.The time-consuming nature of the individual interview technique used by Inhelder has led to the development…
Descriptors: Group Testing, Measurement Techniques, Laboratory Equipment, Individual Differences
Borghi, L.; De Ambrosis, A.; Lamberti, N.; Mascheretti, P. – Physics Education, 2005
A teaching--learning sequence is presented that is designed to help high school pupils gain awareness about the independence of the vertical and horizontal components of free fall motion. The approach we propose is based on the use of experimental activities and computer simulations designed specifically to help pupils reflect on the experiments…
Descriptors: Secondary School Students, Motion, Physics, Teaching Methods
Kiselycznyk, Carly L.; Zhang, Steven; Linster, Christine – Learning & Memory, 2006
While there is evidence that feedback projections from cortical and neuromodulatory structures to the olfactory bulb are crucial for maintaining the oscillatory dynamics of olfactory bulb processing, it is not clear how changes in dynamics are related to odor perception. Using electrical lesions of the olfactory peduncle, sparing output from the…
Descriptors: Feedback, Biological Influences, Role Perception, Neurological Impairments

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