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Cara E. Schwarz; Kimberly S. DeGlopper; Nicole C. Greco; Rosemary S. Russ; Ryan L. Stowe – Science Education, 2025
To prepare students to use science knowledge in their later personal or professional lives, we must attend to what they believe it means to know and learn science (i.e., epistemology). Unfortunately, we have little understanding of how students' epistemologies shift and are stabilized as they navigate their science courses. Researchers have made…
Descriptors: College Science, Modeling (Psychology), Undergraduate Students, Organic Chemistry
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Casselman, Matthew D.; Eichler, Jack F.; Atit, Kinnari – Science Education, 2021
Embodied learning tools (ELTs), such as building and manipulating models, bolster students' learning of spatially demanding science content, such as stereochemistry. However, studies comparing the effectiveness of virtual to physical ELTs on student learning are limited. This study compares online instruction using a virtual ELT, virtual models,…
Descriptors: Multimedia Instruction, Science Instruction, Organic Chemistry, Instructional Effectiveness
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Stieff, Mike – Science Education, 2011
Imagistic reasoning appears to be a critical strategy for learning and problem solving in the sciences, particularly chemistry; however, little is known about how students use imagistic reasoning on genuine assessment tasks in chemistry. The present study employed a think-aloud protocol to explore when and how students use imagistic reasoning for…
Descriptors: Protocol Analysis, Organic Chemistry, Problem Solving, Science Instruction
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Culp, George H.; Castleberry, Sam J. – Science Education, 1971
Compared with students receiving tutorial assistance from teaching assistants and with those with no tutorial assistance, students using CAI programs achieved higher test scores, particularly in the areas of nomenclature, organic reactions, and organic syntheses. (AL)
Descriptors: Chemistry, College Science, Computer Assisted Instruction, Evaluation
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Black, Aaron E.; Deci, Edward L. – Science Education, 2000
Applies self-determination theory to investigate the effects of students' course-specific self-regulation and their perceptions of their instructors' autonomous support on adjustment and academic performance in a college-level organic chemistry course. Hypothesizes that students taking the organic chemistry course for relatively autonomous reasons…
Descriptors: Active Learning, Conventional Instruction, Higher Education, Organic Chemistry
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Cody, John T.; Treagust, David F. – Science Education, 1977
Utilizes a pretest-posttest design to determine if participants (N=26) exhibit significant gains in organic, inorganic, and biological chemistry concepts as the result of a six-week summer program. Significant gains in these areas and in an understanding of the methods and procedures used in scientific explanation are found. (CP)
Descriptors: Achievement, Biochemistry, Chemistry, College Science
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Tsaparlis, Georgios; Angelopoulous, Vasileios – Science Education, 2000
Presents a test of the limits of the Johnstone--El-Banna model of problem solving as related to students' responses to organic-synthesis problems. Finds that the predicted pattern was observed in both samples, although the model was more useful for students without previous problem-solving training and for field-independent and field-intermediate…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Field Dependence Independence, High Schools, Organic Chemistry