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Showing 1 to 15 of 92 results Save | Export
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Anna Stepanova; Christina Belanger; Saira Anwar; Christine Stanley; Ankur Nath; Josh Cherian; Tracy Hammond – Journal of Geoscience Education, 2025
Micropaleontology is a critical tool for determining the ages of geologic records, reconstructing ancient environments, and monitoring modern ecosystem health. However, most students are not exposed to micropaleontology in their college coursework. To enable non-expert instructors to integrate microfossil identification training in their…
Descriptors: Paleontology, College Science, Science Instruction, Undergraduate Students
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Whitenack, Lisa B.; Drew, Joshua A. – Journal of Biological Education, 2019
Given the importance of phylogenetic trees to understanding common ancestry and evolution, they are a necessary part of the undergraduate biology curriculum. However, a number of common misconceptions, such as reading across branch tips and understanding homoplasy, can pose difficulties in student understanding. Students also may take phylogenetic…
Descriptors: Evolution, Genetics, Paleontology, Biology
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Baze, Christina L.; Gray, Ron – Journal of College Science Teaching, 2018
Inquiry methods have been successful in improving science literacy in students of all ages. Model-Based Inquiry (MBI) is an instructional model that engages students in the practices of science through the collaborative development of scientific models to explain an anchoring phenomenon. Student ideas are tested through engagement in content-rich…
Descriptors: Models, Inquiry, Community Colleges, Two Year College Students
Soja, Constance M. – Journal of Geoscience Education, 2014
In a first-year seminar on mass extinctions, a field-based, paleontology-focused exercise promotes active learning about Earth's biodiversity, form and function, and the biomimicry potential of ancient and modern life. Students study Devonian fossils at a local quarry and gain foundational experience in describing anatomy and relating form to…
Descriptors: Science Instruction, College Science, Paleontology, Active Learning
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Lee, Scott A.; Thomas, Joshua D. – Physics Teacher, 2014
In this paper, we examine a first-year torque and angular acceleration problem to address a possible use of the forelimbs of "Tyrannosaurus rex." A 1/40th-scale model (see Fig. 1) is brought to the classroom to introduce the students to the quandary: given that the forelimbs of "T. rex" were too short to reach its mouth, what…
Descriptors: Physics, Interdisciplinary Approach, Animal Behavior, Science Education
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Montgomery, Homer; Donaldson, Katherine – Journal of Geoscience Education, 2014
This study is a research project focused on the implementation of problem-based learning in an honors, paleontology-oriented, Earth Science course. The course, the Age of Dinosaurs, is taught at the University of Texas at Dallas to undergraduates from a range of majors who seek core-curriculum science credit. All class work is centered on fossils…
Descriptors: Problem Based Learning, Paleontology, College Science, Undergraduate Students
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Hippensteel, Scott P. – American Biology Teacher, 2012
The primary decorative flooring tile in the Southpark Mall in Charlotte, North Carolina, is fossiliferous limestone that contains Jurassic ammonoids and belemnoids. Visible in these tiles are more than 500 ammonoids, many of which have been cross sectioned equatorially perpendicular to the plane of coiling. Upper-level undergraduate students from…
Descriptors: Biology, Paleontology, Science Instruction, College Science
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Rice, Diana C.; Kaya, Sibel – Research in Science Education, 2012
This study investigated the relations among preservice elementary teachers' ideas about evolution, their understanding of basic science concepts and college science coursework. Forty-two percent of 240 participants did not accept the theory of human evolution, but held inconsistent ideas about related topics, such as co-existence of humans and…
Descriptors: Evolution, Preservice Teachers, Plate Tectonics, Paleontology
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Notzer, Netta; Abramovitz, Ruth – Anatomical Sciences Education, 2012
The Anatomy Department at Tel-Aviv University Medical School offers its students an elective course of 26 didactic hours on human evolution. The course is open to students from all faculties, who must fulfill all academic requirements, without a prerequisite of a background in anatomy. Approximately 120 students attend annually, a third of them…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Anatomy, Human Body, Evolution
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Werts, Scott; Hinnov, Linda – Journal of Geoscience Education, 2011
We present a MATLAB script INSOLATE.m that calculates insolation at the top of the atmosphere and the total amount of daylight during the year (and other quantities) with respect to geographic latitude and Earth's obliquity (axial tilt). The script output displays insolation values for an entire year on a three-dimensional graph. This tool…
Descriptors: Earth Science, Astronomy, Geography, Science Instruction
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Naples, Virginia L.; Miller, Jon S. – Bioscene: Journal of College Biology Teaching, 2009
Understanding homology is fundamental to learning about evolution. The present study shows an exercise that can be varied in complexity, for which students compile research illustrating the fate of homologous fish skull elements, and assemble a mural to serve as a learning aid. The skull of the most primitive living Actinopterygian (bony fish),…
Descriptors: Evolution, Fundamental Concepts, Animals, Anatomy
Frank, Glenn W., Ed. – 1969
This is a compilation of geological field guides prepared by undergraduates for the Ohio Intercollegiate Field Trips held annually since 1951. A total of eleven colleges have contributed, some contributing more than one guide, resulting in guides to eighteen different trips. Guides include trip logs, maps and sections, notes on formations,…
Descriptors: College Science, Field Trips, Geology, Guides
Laporte, Leo F. – J Geol Educ, 1969
Descriptors: Classification, College Science, Evolution, Paleontology
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Byers, Charles W. – Journal of Geological Education, 1982
Reviews advances in stratigraphy as illustrated in the current geological literature, discussing discontinuity and how the recognition of discontinuity in the stratigraphic record is changing views of Superposition and Original Lateral Continuity. (Author/JN)
Descriptors: College Science, Geology, Higher Education, Paleontology
Stebbins, G. Ledyard; Ayala, Francisco J. – Scientific American, 1985
Recent developments in molecular biology and new interpretations of the fossil record are gradually altering and adding to Charles Darwin's theory, which has been the standard view of the process of evolution for 40 years. Several of these developments and interpretations are identified and discussed. (JN)
Descriptors: Biology, College Science, Evolution, Higher Education
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