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Gibb, Heather; Miller-Struttmann, Nicole – Science and Children, 2015
Archaeology provides the chance to ask questions about human culture, past and present, using artifacts as evidence. By studying archaeology, students learn about how people in their region found and prepared food, responded to changes in their environment (e.g., flooding, earthquakes, droughts), and interacted with other peoples. This article…
Descriptors: Archaeology, Elementary School Science, Elementary School Students, Grade 4
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Richardson, Kerri; Reynolds, Anne; Schwartz, Catherine S. – Mathematics Teacher, 2012
The quadrilaterals problem is a particularly rich task, applicable to in-service teachers as well as to the students they teach. The ways in which students engage in this task, the strategies they use, and the mathematics that results align well with this "MT" Focus Issue on flexible mathematical thinking. The authors offer their observations of…
Descriptors: Thinking Skills, Mathematics Instruction, Mathematics Teachers, Cognitive Processes
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Barth, Lorna – Science and Children, 2007
By changing the venue from festival to a required academic exposition, the traditional science fair was transformed into a "Science Expo" wherein students were guided away from cookbook experiments toward developing a question about their environment into a testable and measurable experiment. The revamped "Science Expo" became a night for students…
Descriptors: Science Activities, Science Fairs, Science Education, Learning Activities
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Leff, Stephen S.; Crick, Nicki R.; Angelucci, Jennifer; Haye, Kisha; Jawad, Abbas F.; Grossman, Michael; Power, Thomas J. – Child Development, 2006
Standard approaches to the development of psychological measures emphasize the role of the research team in identifying constructs, generating and retaining items, and establishing psychometric soundness. Although there are a number of strengths associated with these methods, the resulting measures may not be culturally sensitive to minority…
Descriptors: Social Cognition, Urban Areas, Females, Psychometrics
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Chan, John H. F.; Myron, Rowan; Crawshaw, Martin – School Psychology International, 2005
The Olweus checklist, along with most of the questionnaires commonly used in bullying research, is anonymous. The respondent is not required to put down his/her name. This has been accepted as the "best suited" method of assessing bullying. However, this assumption has not been adequately tested, and there is contrary evidence that this…
Descriptors: Victims of Crime, Elementary School Students, Bullying, Measurement Techniques