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Marrero, Meghan E.; Stevens, Nicole – Science Scope, 2011
The ocean is home to some of Earth's most important producers. Single-celled organisms in the ocean are responsible for more than half of Earth's productivity, as well as most of its oxygen. Phytoplankton are single-celled, plantlike organisms. That is, they have chloroplasts and perform photosynthesis, but are not true plants, which are typically…
Descriptors: Botany, Marine Biology, Marine Education, Science Experiments
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Clary, Renee; Wandersee, James – Science Scope, 2011
It is relatively easy to incorporate plants into a curriculum and extend their use beyond the botany unit into other scientific arenas. There are numerous web-based resources for teachers, including the Human Flower Project (HFP) website, which offers numerous vignettes on all aspects of flowering plants. In addition to botany and invasive plant…
Descriptors: Plants (Botany), Environmental Education, Genetics, Ecology
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Wagler, Ron – Science Scope, 2012
Five past great mass extinctions have occurred during Earth's history. Humanity is currently in the midst of a sixth, human-induced great mass extinction of plant and animal life (e.g., Alroy 2008; Jackson 2008; Lewis 2006; McDaniel and Borton 2002; Rockstrom et al. 2009; Rohr et al. 2008; Steffen, Crutzen, and McNeill 2007; Thomas et al. 2004;…
Descriptors: Ecology, Animals, Environmental Influences, Natural Resources
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Lightbody, Mary – Science Scope, 2011
Students come to class with diverse experiences and backgrounds, and the author tries to take advantage of that diversity in the plant unit. Every year the author secures the help of the two or three green thumbs or green-thumb wannabes to help take care of the collection of plants she brings from home in the fall. The author also invites students…
Descriptors: Classroom Environment, Individualized Instruction, Inquiry, Plants (Botany)
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Conover, Margaret – Science Scope, 2011
Chia seeds will sprout on almost any moist surface, and they respond quickly to experimental variables. Furthermore, the newly recognized nutritional value and rich cultural history of chia seeds offer the possibility of highly motivating and educational interdisciplinary extensions, especially appropriate to students in the middle grades.…
Descriptors: Learner Engagement, Science Teachers, Science Instruction, Plants (Botany)
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Thompson, Stephen – Science Scope, 2010
Despite our best teaching efforts, many students hold misconceptions related to the roles plants play in gas-related processes (Amir and Tamir 1994; Hershey 1992; 2004). In an effort to remedy this problem, the author presents a series of activities that address common plant-related gas-process misconceptions held by middle school students. The…
Descriptors: Misconceptions, Science Instruction, Science Activities, Middle School Students
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Bricker, Patricia Lynn; Sachs, Susan; Binkley, Russell – Science Scope, 2010
Since 2004, middle and high school students have been monitoring the effects of ground-level ozone by collecting data on observable leaf injury on cutleaf coneflower ("Rudbeckia laciniata") and crownbeard ("Verbesina occidentalis") in the Great Smoky Mountains National Park. This project is part of an ongoing citizen-science effort in which…
Descriptors: Parks, Pollution, Environmental Education, Natural Resources
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Garcia-Ruiz, Francisca – Science Scope, 2009
The creation of schoolyard gardens is a growing movement in the United States and around the world (Ballard, Tong, and Usher 1998; Pope 1998; Lewis 2004). It brings together all of the features of authentic hands-on science: Students can collect data on plant growth, observe the plant and animal interactions in the garden, and acquire a sense of…
Descriptors: Plants (Botany), Environmental Education, Hands on Science, Gardening
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Walker-Livingston, Wendy – Science Scope, 2009
Why not combine the use of technology with the excitement of a scavenger hunt that moves middle-level students out into the "wilds" of their school campus to classify plants? In the lesson plan described here, students embark on a botanical scavenger hunt and then document their findings using a digital camera. This project was designed to allow…
Descriptors: Photography, Science Instruction, Middle School Students, Outdoor Education
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Bourdeau, Virginia; Arnold, Mary E. – Science Scope, 2008
The Oregon 4-H Wildlife Stewards program has been training teachers and volunteers to convert school grounds to education sites by constructing schoolyard wildlife habitats since 1997. The publication "What Can We Learn at the Pond? 4-H Wildlife Stewards Master Leader Guide" (Bourdeau 2004a) was written to support the program's focus on developing…
Descriptors: Environmental Education, Wildlife, Science Activities, Inquiry
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Littlejohn, Patty – Science Scope, 2007
Where does cellular respiration take place? How does a plant make food and in turn use the food to produce its own energy? Do animals carry on this process also? To help students answer these and other questions, have them build a model leaf, plant cell, and animal cell. This hands-on project allows students to see and manipulate the reactants and…
Descriptors: Botany, Science Instruction, Animals, Science Activities
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Rockow, Michael – Science Scope, 2007
The author describes how he used to teach a unit on food webs and ecosystems using actual food webs as models. However, the models used by the author tend to be either too simplistic or too complicated for his students. A few years ago, he solved these problems by making up his own food web, complete with invented plants and animals. The model has…
Descriptors: Animals, Ecology, Science Instruction, Models
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West, Donna – Science Scope, 2004
Teaching plant growth to seventh-grade life science students has been interesting for the author because she grew up in a rural area and always had to help in the garden. She made many assumptions about what her rural and suburban students knew. One year she decided to have them grow plants to observe the roots, stems, leaves, flowers, and fruit…
Descriptors: Plants (Botany), Biological Sciences, Science Activities, Science Instruction
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Ross, Ann; Vanderspool, Staria – Science Scope, 2004
Students can use seed characteristics to discriminate between the different kinds of legumes using taxonomic classification processes of sorting and ranking, followed by construction of taxonomic keys. The application of the Learning Cycle process to taxonomic principles, hierarchical classification, and construction of keys presents the…
Descriptors: Learning Processes, Entomology, Classification, Science Instruction
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Doughty, Janet – Science Scope, 1997
Describes an alternative approach to the familiar paper cup and seed project in which students make grass heads out of nylon mesh stockings, sawdust, wire, rubber bands, plastic eyes, and grass seed. Students can observe the effects of light, sprouting rates, and the height and color of the sprouts on these grass heads. This creative activity is…
Descriptors: Elementary Secondary Education, Photosynthesis, Plant Growth, Plants (Botany)
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