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Korb, Michele; Colton, Shannon; Vogt, Gina – American Biology Teacher, 2015
Students often find it challenging to create images of complex, abstract biological processes. Using modified storyboards, which contain predrawn images, students can visualize the process and anchor ideas from activities, labs, and lectures. Storyboards are useful in assessing students' understanding of content in larger contexts. They enable…
Descriptors: Production Techniques, Story Telling, Visual Aids, Teaching Methods
Kampourakis, Kostas – Science & Education, 2013
Textbook descriptions of the foundations of Genetics give the impression that besides Mendel's no other research on heredity took place during the nineteenth century. However, the publication of the "Origin of Species" in 1859, and the criticism that it received, placed the study of heredity at the centre of biological thought. Consequently,…
Descriptors: Genetics, Heredity, Textbooks, Science Education
Ha, Minsu; Nehm, Ross H. – Science & Education, 2014
Although historical changes in scientific ideas sometimes display striking similarities with students' conceptual progressions, some scholars have cautioned that such similarities lack meaningful commonalities. In the history of evolution, while Darwin and his contemporaries often used natural selection to explain evolutionary trait gain or…
Descriptors: Genetics, Evolution, Scientific Concepts, Science History
Militello, Kevin T. – Biochemistry and Molecular Biology Education, 2013
Epigenetic inheritance is the inheritance of genetic information that is not based on DNA sequence alone. One type of epigenetic information that has come to the forefront in the last few years is modified DNA bases. The most common modified DNA base in nature is 5-methylcytosine. Herein, we describe a laboratory experiment that combines…
Descriptors: Genetics, Heredity, Laboratory Experiments, Science Experiments
Ware, Elizabeth A.; Gelman, Susan A. – Cognitive Science, 2014
This set of seven experiments examines reasoning about the inheritance and acquisition of physical properties in preschoolers, undergraduates, and biology experts. Participants (N = 390) received adoption vignettes in which a baby animal was born to one parent but raised by a biologically unrelated parent, and they judged whether the offspring…
Descriptors: Vignettes, Adoption, Animals, Genetics
Senter, Phil – American Biology Teacher, 2013
Many anatomy students begin the course with a misconception that human males and females do not have the same number of ribs. At the root of that misconception is Genesis 2:21-22, in which God removes a rib from Adam to make Eve. Removal of a body part is a surgical procedure, and one does not pass on the results of surgery to one's offspring. The…
Descriptors: Surgery, Anatomy, Misconceptions, Evolution
Hymer, Barry – Gifted Education International, 2014
This conversation was prompted by a blog entry posted by Tim Dracup in January 2012. The subsequent e-exchange between Tim and Barry Hymer explored a number of issues central to the nature and aetiology of giftedness, confronting these issues from contrasting ontological and epistemological stances. As a result, their conversation includes…
Descriptors: Academically Gifted, Foreign Countries, Constructivism (Learning), Epistemology
Falk, Raphael – Science & Education, 2014
Life sciences became Biology, a formal scientific discipline, at the turn of the nineteenth century, when it adopted the methods of reductive physics and chemistry. Mendel's hypothesis of inheritance of discrete factors further introduced a quantitative reductionist dimension into biology. In 1910 Johannsen differentiated between the…
Descriptors: Biology, Biological Sciences, Genetics, Heredity
Russell, Terry; McGuigan, Linda – Primary Science, 2014
Even in the foundation stage (ages 3-5), children reveal an awareness of and enthusiasm for dinosaurs and fossils, so this research includes the entire primary age range. The authors sought to discover what ideas prevail as children develop and how their understanding progresses. Reviewing relevant educational research led them to define five…
Descriptors: Science Instruction, Evolution, Elementary School Science, Inquiry
Gillham, Nicholas W. – Science & Education, 2015
Francis Galton, Charles Darwin's cousin, had wide and varied interests. They ranged from exploration and travel writing to fingerprinting and the weather. After reading Darwin's "On the Origin of Species," Galton reached the conclusion that it should be possible to improve the human stock through selective breeding, as was the…
Descriptors: Heredity, Genetics, Recognition (Achievement), Scientists
Davidson, Julie; Goin-Kochel, Robin P.; Green-Snyder, Lee Anne; Hundley, Rachel J.; Warren, Zachary; Peters, Sarika U. – Journal of Autism and Developmental Disorders, 2014
The broad autism phenotype (BAP) refers to the phenotypic expression of an underlying genetic liability to autism, manifest in non-autistic relatives. This study examined the relationship among the "Broad Autism Phenotype Questionnaire" (BAPQ), "Social Responsiveness Scale: Adult Research Version" (SRS:ARV), and "Family…
Descriptors: Genetic Disorders, Autism, Correlation, Questionnaires
Offner, Susan – American Biology Teacher, 2013
The mutation that caused hemophilia in European royal families during the 19th century has been characterized and presents excellent teaching opportunities.
Descriptors: Genetics, Heredity, Genetic Disorders, Foreign Countries
Lawrence, Katherine E.; Levitt, Jennifer G.; Loo, Sandra K.; Ly, Ronald; Yee, Victor; O'Neill, Joseph; Alger, Jeffry; Narr, Katherine L. – Journal of the American Academy of Child & Adolescent Psychiatry, 2013
Objective: Previous voxel-based and regions-of-interest (ROI)-based diffusion tensor imaging (DTI) studies have found above-normal mean diffusivity (MD) and below-normal fractional anisotropy (FA) in subjects with attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD). However, findings remain mixed, and few studies have examined the contribution of ADHD…
Descriptors: Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder, Siblings, Brain Hemisphere Functions, Children
Russell, Terry; McGuigan, Linda – Primary Science, 2014
As reported in an earlier article (Russell and McGuigan, 2014), with Nuffield Foundation support, the authors of this article have been exploring with a group of primary teachers the teaching and learning of evolution and inheritance, focusing on conceptual progression. The new National Curriculum for England requires learners to access knowledge…
Descriptors: Science Instruction, Elementary School Science, Measurement, Evolution
Ergazaki, Marida; Alexaki, Aspa; Papadopoulou, Chrysa; Kalpakiori, Marieleni – Science & Education, 2014
This paper aims at exploring (a) whether preschoolers recognize that offspring share physical traits with their parents due to birth and behavioural ones due to nurture, and (b) whether they seem ready to explain shared physical traits with a "pre-biological" causal model that includes the contribution of both parents and a rudimentary…
Descriptors: Preschool Children, Heredity, Genetics, Parents