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Showing 1 to 15 of 573 results Save | Export
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Pieter T. L. Beck; Ruby Cornand; Wannes De Turck; Mieke Adriaens – Science & Education, 2025
In this article, we discuss the replication of a forgotten chemical instrument in the context of undergraduate chemistry education. Together with students, we have attempted to replicate an eighteenth century "eudiometrical" procedure. Eudiometry was the practice of measuring the "goodness" of the air by looking at the volume…
Descriptors: Undergraduate Students, College Science, Science Education, Chemistry
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Almorza, D.; Prada, A.; Kandús, M. V.; Salerno, J. C. – Journal of Biological Education, 2023
Graduates in biology or genetics learn Mendel's laws and Hardy-Weinberg equilibrium as students, and they know, use, and sometimes teach these concepts. However, it is unusual to learn about stochastic processes during the graduate studies of these topics, although the applications of Markov chains in the fields of genetics or biology are…
Descriptors: Graduate Students, College Science, Biology, Genetics
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Rojas, Roberto – Physics Teacher, 2022
In one of the Faraday's experiments an electric current is induced in a conducting loop when a magnet in front of it moves towards or away from the loop. While the direction of circulation of the electric current in the loop has only two options, it depends on three experimental conditions that generate eight cases. Even though the Faraday law or…
Descriptors: Energy, Magnets, Science Experiments, Scientific Principles
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McCaughin, Patrick; Ford, Lyle – Physics Teacher, 2021
Since its debut in Elihu Thomson's 1886 article "Novel Phenomena of Alternating Currents," the Thomson jumping ring apparatus has been a popular and captivating demonstration of magnetic induction. The components are quite simple. There is a solenoid, an iron core, and a ring. The demonstration usually begins with the professor saying…
Descriptors: Physics, Magnets, Scientific Concepts, Demonstrations (Educational)
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Wang, Fei – Physics Teacher, 2022
The ideal gas law, "PV = nRT," is one of the simplest physical laws in nature that is introduced to students as early as in high school and first year in college. In this equation, "P" stands for pressure, "V" is the volume, "n" is the amount expressed in mole, "T" is the temperature in Kelvin…
Descriptors: Physics, Scientific Principles, Fuels, Graphs
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Barceló-Oliver, Miquel; Cabello, Carlos P.; Torrens-Serra, Joan; Miró, Manuel; Cabot, Catalina; Bosch, Rafael; Delgado, Montserrat R. – Journal of Chemical Education, 2021
Although residues and resource shortages are major problems of modern living, these topics are not usually properly covered in university curricula. To tackle this situation, we have guided undergraduate students through the design of a group of active learning activities, to demonstrate the science behind separation and recycling: trash…
Descriptors: College Science, Undergraduate Students, Science Instruction, Recycling
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Navalkar, Vinita; Sawant, Sumedh; Mourya, Shubham – Physics Education, 2021
The concept of black body is of primary importance in studying the energy transfer of thermal electromagnetic radiation at all wavelengths. Several physical bodies like incandescent lamps, electric heaters, stoves, the sun and the other stars, microwave background radiation, etc., are considered to be black bodies as their radiation spectra fits…
Descriptors: Energy, Radiation, Light, Physics
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Joshua W. Reid; Michael L. Rutledge – Bioscene: Journal of College Biology Teaching, 2022
We developed and field-tested an active learning exercise designed to provide biology students with the opportunity to consider key aspects of the nature of science as a method of inquiry, particularly the roles of observation and inference in the development of scientific explanations and how scientists deal with uncertainty. In the activity…
Descriptors: Active Learning, Biology, Science Instruction, Scientific Principles
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Dhabih V. Chulhai – Journal of Chemical Education, 2024
We present a tool, one that is both a stand-alone web-based video game and a Python package, designed for students to explore a particle's wave function on one-dimensional potential surfaces. The tool relies on a basis set formalism and can, therefore, explore any one-dimensional potential surface imaginable. This tool also lets students interact…
Descriptors: Science Instruction, Teaching Methods, Technology Uses in Education, Educational Games
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Shetranjiwalla, Shegufa; Leach, Nicole; Van Belle, Lori; Kingdon, Kassidy – Journal of Chemical Education, 2021
Is the reductionist approach to teaching chemical principles in the laboratory adequate for students to make effective evaluations? In this work, using the example of sunscreens, students first assessed the analytical chemistry parameters of the active ingredients, later comparing and contrasting them with organic chemistry information for…
Descriptors: Science Instruction, Scientific Principles, Science Laboratories, Organic Chemistry
Tyler A. Shaffer; Carlos U. Herrada; Avery M. Walker; Laura D. Casto-Boggess; Lisa A. Holland; Timothy R. Johnson; Megan E. Jones; Yousef S. Elshamy – Journal of Chemical Education, 2023
Electrophoresis is integral to analytical and biochemistry experiences in undergraduate education; however, fundamental principles of the method are often taught in upper-level laboratories through hands-on experiences. A laboratory activity is reported that teaches the concepts of electrophoretic mobility and electroosmotic flow. A single…
Descriptors: Chemistry, Science Instruction, Teaching Methods, Cost Effectiveness
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Ben-Abu, Yuval – Physics Education, 2019
The conservation law of energy and momentum can be examined and demonstrated by a well-known collision experiment. In this experiment, several identical elastic balls are suspended from a horizontal frame. When the ball at one end is pulled aside and released, thus allowing it to swing like a pendulum, it hits the next ball. The outcome is…
Descriptors: Physics, Science Instruction, Energy, Motion
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Dong, Li-Kun; Li, Zi-Hao; Zhang, Shu-Yu – Journal of Chemical Education, 2021
Student-centered teaching has become increasingly common in higher education as researchers have demonstrated its efficacy in recent decades. Herein, we hope to establish an efficient problem-based learning (PBL) method, which can help upper-division students learn organic chemistry content by combining teaching materials, experimental literature,…
Descriptors: Student Centered Learning, Science Instruction, College Science, Problem Based Learning
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Hope E. Lackey; Rachel L. Sell; Gilbert L. Nelson; Thomas A. Bryan; Amanda M. Lines; Samuel A. Bryan – Journal of Chemical Education, 2023
The methodology and mathematical treatment of several classic multivariate methods for the analysis of spectroscopic data is demonstrated in a straightforward way that can be used as a basis for teaching an undergraduate introductory course on chemometric analysis. The multivariate techniques of classical least-squares (CLS), principal component…
Descriptors: Chemistry, Data Analysis, Optics, Lighting
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Vandervoort, Kurt – Physics Teacher, 2020
Newton's law of cooling describes an object whose temperature decreases exponentially with time. Because of its many applications, it is a frequent topic of introductory physics labs. In this article, I describe an experiment designed for the freshman year algebra-based physics course that applies this law to answering the question, "Why…
Descriptors: Science Instruction, Scientific Principles, Heat, Science Experiments
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