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Cherif, Abour – Science Teacher, 2012
The author has successfully used a learning activity titled "The Year I Was Born" to motivate students to conduct historical research and present key scientific discoveries from their birth year. The activity promotes writing, helps students enhance their scientific literacy, and also improves their attitude toward the learning of science. As one…
Descriptors: Scientific Research, Scientific Concepts, Scientific Literacy, Science Activities
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Entress, Cole; Wagner, Aimee – Science Teacher, 2014
Scientists, science teachers, and serious students recognize that success in science classes requires consistent practice--including study at home. Whether balancing chemical equations, calculating angular momentum, or memorizing the steps of cell division, students must review material repeatedly to fully understand new ideas--and must practice…
Descriptors: Science Education, Science Instruction, Science Interests, Learning Strategies
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Jackson, Julie; Dickinson, Gail; Horton, Danielle – Science Teacher, 2010
Field-note poetry is the product of the authors' efforts to combine current research in learning and cognition with integrated geoscience and language arts activities. In this article, they present a fun and effective activity that teaches students how to record detailed field notes and sensory observations that become the framework and…
Descriptors: Geology, Earth Science, Poetry, Integrated Curriculum
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Aydin, Sevgi; Hanuscin, Deborah L. – Science Teacher, 2011
In this article, the authors describe a lesson that uses the 5E Learning Cycle to help students not only understand the atomic model but also how Ernest Rutherford helped develop it. The lesson uses Rutherford's gold foil experiment to focus on three aspects of the nature of science: the empirical nature of science, the tentativeness of scientific…
Descriptors: Scientific Principles, Learning Processes, Science Instruction, Nuclear Energy
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Duran, Emilio; Duran, Lena; Haney, Jodi; Scheuermann, Amy – Science Teacher, 2011
The National Science Education Standards are designed to provide a vision of scientific literacy for "all" students--regardless of age, race, ethnic background, English-language proficiency, socioeconomic status, disability, or giftedness. One of the most powerful strategies in science instruction--which aligns with the Standards--is the use of…
Descriptors: Learning Processes, Scientific Literacy, Science Instruction, Language Proficiency
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Watson, Sandy; Miller, Ted – Science Teacher, 2009
Classification is a vital science-process skill for all students to master. Understanding dichotomous keys as a means of classification enables students to better comprehend large amounts of information and understand how to organize, compare and contrast, and analyze that information. To biology students, mastering the dichotomous key provides an…
Descriptors: Identification, Biology, Classification, Learning Processes
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Lightbody, Mary – Science Teacher, 2008
Invasive species, commonly known as "invasives," are nonnative plants, animals, and microbes that completely take over and change an established ecosystem. The consequences of invasives' spread are significant. In fact, many of the species that appear on the Endangered Species list are threatened by invasives. Therefore, the topic of invasive…
Descriptors: Investigations, Ecology, Learning Processes, Science Instruction
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Pecore, John; Snow, Melanie; Lim, Miyoun – Science Teacher, 2009
A group of high school students and chaperones boarded a bus for historic Oakland Cemetery located in downtown Atlanta. Students explored the site and made observations of the gravestones, many of which were old and run-down. Upon leaving the cemetery, students--based on their interests--developed various chemistry investigations aimed at…
Descriptors: Investigations, Chemistry, Learning Processes, High School Students
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Colley, Kabba – Science Teacher, 2008
Project-based science (PBS) instruction can simply be defined as a student-centered science teaching approach, in which students produce tangible learning outcomes by posing and answering research questions that are relevant to their own lives and communities. In a PBS classroom, students are encouraged to take responsibility for their own…
Descriptors: Science Projects, Learning Processes, Science Teachers, Science Instruction
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Hitt, Austin; Townsend, Jeffery Scott – Science Teacher, 2004
Chemistry is a difficult subject for students to understand because its core concepts--atoms, molecules, and chemical bonds--cannot be directly observed. Students primarily learn chemistry through their senses and do not distinguish between explanations at different conceptual levels. In order to master chemistry, students must develop an…
Descriptors: Learning Processes, Chemistry, Science Instruction, Models
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Crumrine, Tom; Demers, Chris – Science Teacher, 2007
The science teachers at New Hampshire's Concord High School are no longer satisfied with what Wiggins and McTighe call the "teach, test, and hope for the best" learning cycle (2005). These teachers have been stepping up to the professional responsibility that demands more of them and their students--the responsibility to teach for…
Descriptors: Learning Processes, Science Teachers, Formative Evaluation, Teacher Educators
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Gillis, Victoria Ridgeway; MacDougall, Gregory – Science Teacher, 2007
One way to help students learn to read science and teach the content simultaneously is by incorporating classroom strategies that actively engage students in thinking, talking, reading, and writing about science. To maximize the probability that strategies will be effective is to use a learning cycle as a guide when designing lessons. This article…
Descriptors: Teaching Methods, Learning Processes, Science Education, Educational Strategies
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Patterson, Jeffery; Merwin, Brandy J. – Science Teacher, 2002
Learning cycle investigations allow science students to model the activities of real scientists. An important step in modeling is data collection, which can present a problem in an astronomy course. The celestial body being studied often is unobservable for various reasons. (Contains 3 figures.)
Descriptors: Astronomy, Classification, Learning Processes, Investigations
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Hobart, April – Science Teacher, 2005
Nature journaling is a useful skill for science students, independent of whether they also consider themselves artists. A pencil and sketchbook can be carried anywhere to record ecological information in many ways. A traditional page in a nature journal may consist of quick studies of plant and animal life sketched out as rudimentary line drawings…
Descriptors: Observation, Learning Processes, Ecology, Animals
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Renner, John W.; And Others – Science Teacher, 1986
Describes a curriculum development project in which the Science Education Center of the University of Oklahoma and the science department of Norman (Oklahoma) High School prepared and classroom tested complete courses in biology, chemistry, and physics using the learning cycle principles of exploration, conceptual invention, and discovery. (JN)
Descriptors: Biology, Chemistry, Curriculum Development, High Schools
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