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Gaiser, J. Christopher; Roberts, Michael F. – Bioscene: Journal of College Biology Teaching, 2022
We describe a novel, university-level, introductory biology course that uses evolution as a narrative framework. Our course conveys the content in an introductory biology course by telling the story of the evolution of life on Earth. We begin with early Earth environments in which biological molecules and processes evolved and led to the first…
Descriptors: Biology, Evolution, Science Instruction, Teaching Methods
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Merav Siani; Ohad Levkovich; Roee Ben Nissan; Awni Gabara; Moshera Alatawna; Anat Yarden – American Biology Teacher, 2025
High-school teachers and students do not usually have access to scientific research advances because original research papers contain many highly specialized words that are specific to the discipline. Scientific newsletters (SNs) summarize current scientific research advances and trends. During the 2022-2023 school year, 21 SNs teaching biology…
Descriptors: Biology, Science Teachers, Newsletters, Information Dissemination
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Jeremy L. Hsu; Anjali Misra; Michael J. Wolyniak; Carlos C. Goller; Stephanie Mathews; Uma Swamy; Dina L. Newman; Michael E. Moore – Journal of Microbiology & Biology Education, 2025
The 2011 "Vision & Change" report outlined several recommendations for transforming undergraduate biology education, sparking multiple pedagogical reform efforts. Among these was the Promoting Active Learning and Mentoring (PALM) network, an NSF-funded program that provided mentorship and training to instructors on implementing…
Descriptors: Biology, Science Education, Educational Change, Undergraduate Study
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Caryn Babaian; Sudhir Kumar; Sayaka Miura – American Biology Teacher, 2025
Water is one of the most common molecules in the universe. Water is polarized, but it has many states besides the normal tetrahedron depicted in standard biology texts. Water is also the most ubiquitous molecule on Earth, the universal solvent. It is the internal and external habitat of cells. Ecologically, water is contiguous with life and the…
Descriptors: Biology, Evolution, Science Instruction, Water
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Catie Nielson; Emma Pitt; Michal Fux; Kristin de Nesnera; Nicole Betz; Jessica S. Leffers; Kimberly D. Tanner; John D. Coley – CBE - Life Sciences Education, 2025
Previous research has shown that students employ intuitive thinking when understanding scientific concepts. Three types of intuitive thinking--essentialist, teleological, and anthropic thinking--are used in biology learning and can lead to misconceptions. However, it is unknown how commonly these types of intuitive thinking, or cognitive…
Descriptors: Language Usage, College Students, Biology, Scientific Concepts
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Coleman, Aaron B.; Lorenzo, Kyla; McLamb, Flannery; Sanku, Abhiraj; Khan, Sahil; Bozinovic, Goran – Biochemistry and Molecular Biology Education, 2023
Effectively teaching scientific reasoning requires an understanding of the challenges students face when learning these skills. We designed an assessment that measures undergraduate student abilities to form hypotheses, design experiments, and interpret data from experiments in cellular and molecular biology. The assessment uses…
Descriptors: Logical Thinking, Science Process Skills, Undergraduate Students, Cytology
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Flowers, Sharleen; Holder, Kal H.; Gardnera, Stephanie M. – Journal of Microbiology & Biology Education, 2023
Understanding molecular processes and coordinating the various activities across levels of organization in biological systems is a complicated task, yet many curricular guidelines indicate that undergraduate students should master it. Employing mechanistic reasoning can facilitate describing and investigating biological phenomena. Biofilms are an…
Descriptors: Microbiology, Science Education, Undergraduate Students, Molecular Biology
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David Lora – Teaching Statistics: An International Journal for Teachers, 2024
It is important for young people to be aware of job profiles and activities in the professional world. Bringing the education system closer to the professional world is vital for them to make decisions about their academic and professional futures. Programs developed to connect 15-year-old students who in Spain are in year 4 of their Compulsory…
Descriptors: Biology, Statistics, Statistics Education, Secondary School Students
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Tom Bielik; Dirk Krüger – Journal of Biological Education, 2024
Critical thinking is one of the most important sets of cognitive abilities and dispositions required for both scientists and global citizens. In this explorative study, we examine which critical thinking aspects are perceived as relevant by biology graduate students and in what ways they found these aspects important for their scientific work.…
Descriptors: Biology, College Science, Graduate Students, Critical Thinking
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Carola Garrecht; Anneke Steegh; Dustin Schiering – Journal of Research in Science Teaching, 2024
In the past, students' participation in science competitions has been positively associated with their aspirations to pursue a career in science. Previous studies, however, were predominantly focused around successful competitors, overlooking the largest group of participants: those who are faced with early elimination. We therefore aimed to…
Descriptors: Competition, Biology, Adolescents, Career Choice
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Musa Dikmenli; Vedat Kadir Ozkan; Selda Kilic; Osman Cardak – Journal of Education in Science, Environment and Health, 2024
As a result of human beings' activities to dominate nature and transform it for their own benefit as they continue to advance in science and technology, environmental problems such as climate change have become the biggest threat faced by the biosphere in the current century. One of the biggest problems of humanity today is the scarcity of water…
Descriptors: Science Education, Secondary School Science, Biology, Textbook Content
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Patricia Moreira; Lisa Rezende; Ashton Goodell; Paul Blowers; Lisa Elfring; Vicente Talanquer – Biochemistry and Molecular Biology Education, 2024
The effective implementation of evidence-based teaching (EBT) in large college courses benefits from the successful use of instructional teams. An instructional team's feedback allows instructors to act based on evidence of student learning, addressing students' needs. This feedback may be particularly important for novice instructors or…
Descriptors: Feedback (Response), Teaching Methods, Biology, Cancer
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Louw, Marti; Sanford-Dolly, Camellia W. – Science Education, 2024
Scientific observation is a disciplinary-informed way of looking at the world that requires the coordination of domain knowledge and perceptual skills with specialized tools and techniques to systematically identify objects, organisms, specimens, or phenomena of interest. Identification is a particular form of skilled observational practice where…
Descriptors: Volunteers, Observation, Identification, Biology
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Ashlyn E. Pierson; Corey E. Brady; Sarah J. Lee; Deborah Shuler; Pratim Sengupta; Douglas B. Clark – Science Education, 2024
Studies of both professional science practice and children's science learning show that care is not merely ancillary to disciplinary work but a core and generative constituent of science practice. In science education research, however, students' care is often overlooked. In this paper, we describe the expression of care across two STEM classrooms…
Descriptors: STEM Education, Letters (Correspondence), Caring, Grade 6
Stephanie Kathryn Polutchko – ProQuest LLC, 2024
Dissertation objectives included investigating how environment and plant life history influence aspects of leaf vascular infrastructure that supports photosynthesis, as well as photoprotection of the photosynthetic process. Additionally, I aimed to engage students in science and plant biology through innovative teaching methods. In summer annual…
Descriptors: Botany, Educational Innovation, Expertise, Learner Engagement
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