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Chen, Hsin-Yu; Jablonski, Nina G. – Journal of College and Character, 2019
Skin color, one of the most conspicuous physical traits, encompasses complex social and cultural meanings and value judgments that can influence individuals' lived experiences and social wellbeing in a profound way. In this article, the authors provide a brief overview of how skin color diversity evolved, its corresponding biological and…
Descriptors: Social Bias, Cultural Influences, Social Influences, Interaction
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García-Fernandez, Pablo; Moreno, Miguel; Aramburu, José Antonio – Journal of Chemical Education, 2016
The complex approximation is widely used in the framework of the Ligand Field Theory for explaining the optical properties of crystalline coordination compounds. Here, we show that there are essential features of these systems that cannot be understood with the usual approximation that only considers an isolated complex at the correct equilibrium…
Descriptors: Science Instruction, College Science, Undergraduate Study, Chemistry
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Prince, Michael; Vigeant, Margot; Nottis, Katharyn – Chemical Engineering Education, 2016
Eight inquiry-based activities, described here in sufficient detail for faculty to adopt in their own courses, were designed to teach students fundamental concepts in heat transfer. The concept areas chosen were (1) factors affecting the rate vs. amount of heat transfer, (2) temperature vs. perceptions of hot and cold, (3) temperature vs. energy…
Descriptors: Inquiry, Teaching Methods, Heat, Energy
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Pratt, Sarah S.; Lupton, Tina M.; Richardson, Kerri – Teaching Children Mathematics, 2015
As teachers seek activities to assist students in understanding division as more than just the algorithm, they find many examples of division as fair sharing. However, teachers have few activities to engage students in a quotative (measurement) model of division. Efraim Fischbein and his colleagues (1985) defined two types of whole-number…
Descriptors: Mathematics Instruction, Mathematical Concepts, Color, Teaching Methods
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Guy, Richard – Advances in Physiology Education, 2012
Anyone who has taught neurophysiology would be aware of recurring concepts that students find difficult to understand. However, a greater problem is the development of misconceptions that may be difficult to change. For example, one common misconception is that action potentials pass directly across chemical synapses. Difficulties may be…
Descriptors: Computer Assisted Instruction, Physiology, Electronic Learning, Feedback (Response)
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Porter, Keri; Yokoi, Craig; Yee, Bertina – Science and Children, 2011
Along with inquiry-based teaching, exploring the elements of art can guide students to view and represent objects realistically. Understanding line, shape, color, value, form, space, and texture helps bridge the gap between what students actually observe and what their preconceived ideas about the object may be. This type of explicit instruction…
Descriptors: Active Learning, Inquiry, Student Attitudes, Theory Practice Relationship
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Carvalho, Paulo Simeao; Sampaio e Sousa, Adriano – Physics Education, 2006
People usually talk about "hot and cold" colours without really thinking of the impact these definitions may have on scientific understanding. These colours are associated with the human sensations of hot and cold, and this idea is consistent with commonsense and daily experience. Interacting with students, we detect conceptual conflicts when they…
Descriptors: Textbooks, Misconceptions, Radiation, Scientific Concepts
Fielding, Randall – DesignShare (NJ1), 2006
Uniform illumination levels in the classroom and focused brightness on the "teaching wall" made good sense for students in Henry Ford's era. If you were training to take your place on the assembly line, you needed to focus on the work at hand and ahead to your supervisor, but the future no longer belongs to students who look only straight ahead.…
Descriptors: Lighting, Color, Educational Facilities Design, Educational Environment