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Caraballo, Tami; Crowther, Gregory – Science Teacher, 2018
The Idea Bank column provides tips and techniques for creative teaching, in about 1,000 words. As students use increasingly diverse internet sources, it becomes hard to tell whether their answers are truly original. A general solution to this dilemma is to ask students to present information in a format that they are unlikely to encounter in books…
Descriptors: Creative Teaching, Teaching Methods, Information Literacy, Information Skills
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McCormick, Cynthia – Science Teacher, 2012
For this activity, high school chemistry students compete in a cooking contest. They must determine the chemical and physical changes that occur in the food they prepare, present their recipe as a step-by-step procedure similar to a lab procedure, identify chemicals in the food, and present all measurements in both metric and English units. The…
Descriptors: Chemistry, High Schools, Secondary School Science, Teaching Methods
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Winter, Julia – Science Teacher, 2013
This article describes a project that includes a two-week series of researching, essay writing, and speaking lessons exploring the broader implications of using ethanol as a fuel. The author, a chemistry teacher, describes how she uses a senate hearing discussion of ethanol fuel subsidies as the forum for a role-play. The four components of the…
Descriptors: Science Instruction, Fuels, Teaching Methods, Creative Teaching
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Cox, Scott – Science Teacher, 2012
After years of using Rube Goldberg-inspired projects to teach concepts of simple machines, the author sought a comparable project to reinforce electricity lessons in his ninth-grade Science and Technology course. The Friendship Detector gives students a chance to design, test, and build a complex circuit with multiple switches and battery-powered…
Descriptors: Friendship, Value Judgment, Science Instruction, Scientific Concepts
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Meyer, Daniel Z.; Kubarek-Sandor, Joy; Kedvesh, James; Heitzman, Cheryl; Pan, Yaozhen; Faik, Sima – Science Teacher, 2012
Creating inquiry activities is inherently difficult. Asking meaningful questions requires both background knowledge on the part of the students and complexity on the part of the phenomena. Yet numerous strategies can help teachers conduct inquiry activities. In this article, the authors share a taxonomy of teaching strategies used to create…
Descriptors: Science Teachers, Teaching Methods, Inquiry, Creative Teaching
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Clary, Renee; Wandersee, James – Science Teacher, 2011
This article discusses a creative visualization project to motivate and engage students. Students depict a dinosaur in its ecosystem and include all three elements of the environment: air, land, and water. Students explore scientific content in evolution, natural selection, food webs, ecosystems and geologic time. (Contains 6 figures.)
Descriptors: Science Activities, Geology, Visualization, Ecology
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Farrar, Jennifer; Barnhart, Kelsi – Science Teacher, 2011
Chromosomes, alleles, chromatids, genotype, phenotype, mitosis, meiosis, fertilization--this vocabulary can be overwhelming, confusing, and difficult for students to tie together. However, since these terms are commonplace in the high school biology classroom, and are the basis for understanding both DNA and heredity, students must understand…
Descriptors: Biology, Genetics, Science Instruction, Heredity
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Blickenstaff, Jacob Clark – Science Teacher, 2011
Movie clips can provide data for content-rich problem solving, show students exotic phenomena, allow them to apply science concepts in a new setting, and foster connections between science and the humanities. Though the latest release will have the advantage of pop-culture currency, films old enough to be released on DVD give teachers more…
Descriptors: Video Technology, Humanities, Science Instruction, Films
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Rohrig, Brian – Science Teacher, 2010
A major goal of education is to help learners store information in long-term memory and use that information on later occasions to effectively solve problems (Vockell 2010). Therefore, this author began to use the Rubik's cube to help students learn to problem solve. There is something special about this colorful three-dimensional puzzle that…
Descriptors: Long Term Memory, Teaching Methods, Problem Solving, Puzzles
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McComas, William F., Ed. – Science Teacher, 2009
In both universities and K-12 schools, students leave one world and enter another as they attend classes in discipline-specific domains. But how can students gain the experiences necessary to make discoveries--for personal satisfaction, for academic enlightenment, and perhaps even for the betterment of humankind--without educators who see the…
Descriptors: Theory Practice Relationship, Science Instruction, Interdisciplinary Approach, Sciences
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Song, Youngjin; Ahlswede, Donna; Clausen, Christina; Herbig, Laura; Oliver, J. Steve – Science Teacher, 2010
The National Science Education Standards suggest that students work as real scientists in the classroom (NRC 1996; 2000). To accomplish this task, the authors developed community-based inquiry lessons (CBILs) that provide students with the opportunity to solve problems as a class, based on the concept of whole-class inquiry (WCI) presented by…
Descriptors: Guidelines, Scientists, Science Instruction, Inquiry
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Berumen, Michael L. – Science Teacher, 2008
As biology teachers, we should embrace the ever-increasing appearance of biology in movies and other media as an opportunity to engage students in active learning and to facilitate critical-thinking and investigative skills in the classroom. In this article, the author provides examples and strategies from his experience using popular movies in…
Descriptors: Active Learning, Biology, Science Instruction, Films
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Hubenthal, Michael; Braile, Larry; Taber, John – Science Teacher, 2008
The Earthquake Machine (EML), a mechanical model of stick-slip fault systems, can increase student engagement and facilitate opportunities to participate in the scientific process. This article introduces the EML model and an activity that challenges ninth-grade students' misconceptions about earthquakes. The activity emphasizes the role of models…
Descriptors: Creative Teaching, Seismology, Concept Formation, Misconceptions
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Rutherford, Sandra; Coffman, Margaret – Science Teacher, 2005
Often science teachers perform demonstrations only to discover that students have already seen the experiment in a previous course. Teachers should take advantage of these opportunities to showcase the interconnectedness of different science disciplines. One example of a demonstration used across most science disciplines and grade levels involves…
Descriptors: Science Teachers, Creative Teaching, Demonstrations (Educational), Science Instruction
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Cady, Susan – Science Teacher, 2005
One of the first tasks students learn in chemistry is to pronounce and spell the names of elements and learn their corresponding chemical symbols. Repetitive oral recitation is commonly used to learn this information, but games and puzzles can make this task creative, variable, and fun. Elemental Food for Thought is a puzzlelike activity that…
Descriptors: Chemistry, Secondary School Students, Science Teachers, Creative Teaching
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