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Bartkovich, Kevin G. – Mathematics Teacher, 2013
The standard for measuring fuel efficiency in the U.S. has been miles per gallon (mpg). However, the Environmental Protection Agency's (EPA) switch in rating fuel efficiency from miles per gallon to gallons per hundred miles with the 2013 model-year cars leads to interesting and relevant mathematics with real-world connections. By modeling…
Descriptors: Efficiency, Fuels, Energy Education, Fuel Consumption
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Treptow, Richard S. – Journal of Chemical Education, 2010
Topics commonly taught in a general chemistry course can be used to calculate the quantity of carbon dioxide emitted into the atmosphere by various human activities. Each calculation begins with the balanced chemical equation for the reaction that produces the CO[subscript 2] gas. Stoichiometry, thermochemistry, the ideal gas law, and dimensional…
Descriptors: Chemistry, Fuels, Fuel Consumption, Computation
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Quagliana, David F. – Tech Directions, 2010
This article describes an electrical technology experiment that shows students how to determine the cost of using an electrical appliance. The experiment also provides good math practice and teaches basic electricity terms and concepts, such as volt, ampere, watt, kilowatt, and kilowatt-hour. This experiment could be expanded to calculate the cost…
Descriptors: Fuel Consumption, Electronic Equipment, Energy, Experiments
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Carolan, Michael S. – Rural Sociology, 2009
This article develops a broad sociological understanding of why biofuels lost out to leaded gasoline as the fuel par excellence of the twentieth century, while drawing comparisons with biofuels today. It begins by briefly discussing the fuel-scape in the United States in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, examining the farm…
Descriptors: Fuels, Agricultural Occupations, Fuel Consumption, Energy
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Lang, Aaron B. – Technology and Engineering Teacher, 2011
Transportation can simply be defined as the movement of goods, services, and people from one location to another. Without an efficient means to transport goods from place to place, the economy would be nothing like it is today. Throughout the history of the United States, American railroads have paved the way toward creating a nation of great…
Descriptors: Transportation, Power Technology, Distributive Education, United States History
Hurowitz, Amanda – Understanding Our Gifted, 2010
Sometimes students come up with crazy ideas. When this author first started teaching at Thomas Jefferson High School for Science and Technology in Virginia five years ago, she had a sophomore share such an idea with her. He wanted to put solar panels on the school's roof as a way to reduce the school's carbon footprint and set a bright clean…
Descriptors: Sustainable Development, Conservation (Environment), Ecology, Energy Conservation
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Rosset, Peter – Bulletin of Science, Technology & Society, 2009
In this article, agrofuels are examined in the context of the world food price crisis and the "food sovereignty" proposal for addressing the crisis. Both short- and long-term causes of the crisis are examined, and while agrofuels are presently not a prime causal factor they are clearly contraindicated by the crisis. Food sovereignty,…
Descriptors: Food, Fuel Consumption, Crisis Intervention, Cost Indexes
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Lazaros, Edward J. – Tech Directions, 2012
Most high school students are at an age when they are learning to drive. They often want to offer input when their parents decide on what vehicle to purchase, so the activity described in this article should have direct personal interest for them. It allows students to use technology and mathematics to determine the environmental impacts of…
Descriptors: Educational Technology, Engines, Power Technology, Energy Management
O'Neill, Julie Treick – Rethinking Schools, 2012
Natural gas production in Wyoming is a lucrative and influential industry. All the perks--jobs, education spending, the budget surplus--are huge incentives for communities and the fossil fuel-friendly state legislature to play along, to stay silent. And many are willing. There has been natural gas production in the state for almost a century, but…
Descriptors: Hydraulics, Fuels, Global Education, Site Analysis
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Roman, Harry T. – Tech Directions, 2008
As a child, the author and his father built a basement workshop where the father taught himself radio and television repair, and the son learned skills that led him to an engineering career. In this article, the author relates how his father gave him a lesson that showed cars are actually rolling power plants. Here, he explains how cars can be…
Descriptors: Motor Vehicles, Energy, Fuel Consumption
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Wikina, Suanu Bliss; Thompson, Cynthia Carlton; Blackwell, Elinor – Journal of Technology Studies, 2010
Increasing population, total economic volume, and human consumption levels have resulted in problems of resource shortages, climate change, ozone layer depletion, land regression, and deteriorating environmental pollution. Printing and related industries constitute one of the major sources of environmental pollution due to heavy energy and…
Descriptors: Printing, Industry, Energy, Depleted Resources
Leathers, Dave – School Business Affairs, 2010
Every year, K-12 facilities waste millions of dollars in excess energy consumption. Those dollars may take the form of lost heat through walls, windows, doors, and roofs. Or the villain may be poorly conceived or mismanaged control systems. Those excess funds that districts are sending to the local utility companies could be invested "at home" to…
Descriptors: Elementary Secondary Education, Energy Conservation, School Buildings, Educational Finance
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Bembenic, Meredith Hill; Cratsley, Chira Endress; Hartwell, Bradley; Guertin, Laura; Furman, Tanya – Science Scope, 2012
As the United States strives to achieve energy independence, students need to be literate about energy and environmental issues. In this article, the authors present a lesson about the nation's electricity resources that is part 1 of a free, comprehensive unit on coal and energy that is available online (http://tinyurl.com/coalenergyunit). The…
Descriptors: Environmental Education, Fuels, Energy, Graduate Students
Carlson, Scott – Chronicle of Higher Education, 2009
In July, when energy prices were sky-high and some pundits were predicting a continued rise, Charles Riordan, facilities director at Loyola College of Maryland, and his colleagues locked in a chunk of their electricity prices--about a quarter of the college's consumption--to cover the next two years. Now that energy prices have fallen, the…
Descriptors: Energy Management, Fuel Consumption, Cost Indexes, Economic Change
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Evans, Robert L. – Bulletin of Science, Technology & Society, 2008
In general terms there are only three primary energy sources: fossil fuels, renewable energy, and nuclear fission. For fueling road transportation, there has been much speculation about the use of hydrogen as an energy carrier, which would usher in the "hydrogen economy." A parallel situation would use a simple battery to store electricity…
Descriptors: Fuels, Energy Management, Transportation, Energy
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