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Showing 1 to 15 of 120 results Save | Export
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Dionne Cross Francis; Serife Sevinc; Ayfer Eker Karakaya; Verily Tan – Mathematics Teacher: Learning and Teaching PK-12, 2024
Providing students with opportunities to build, and test and revise ideas, can help them develop critical thinking and problem-solving skills. In this article, the authors describe how core measurement and geometry concepts were embedded within a "Model It!" task. They replicate an industry-based, interdisciplinary problem, but only…
Descriptors: Secondary School Mathematics, Geometric Concepts, Problem Solving, Creative Thinking
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Thomas D. Montgomery; Bridget M. Green; Cliff G. Oliech; Jeffrey D. Evanseck – Journal of Postsecondary Education and Disability, 2024
Colleges are becoming increasingly diverse, including strengthening representation of students with disabilities in STEM (Science, Teaching, Engineering, and Math) fields; however, representation still lags behind national trends. To adapt to this changing demographic and improve representation, STEM college professors must be prepared to grant…
Descriptors: STEM Education, Students with Disabilities, College Faculty, Equal Education
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Sternberg, Robert J.; Ehsan, Hoda; Ghahremani, Mehdi – Roeper Review, 2022
In this article, we present a hierarchical model for teaching scientific thinking to gifted students. This article follows up on an article published 40 years ago in this journal. The problem now, as 40 years ago, is that gifted students often are taught science courses at a more intensive level, but without their truly learning how to think…
Descriptors: Academically Gifted, Gifted Education, Science Education, Knowledge Level
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Levesley, Mark – Primary Science, 2021
The COVID-19 pandemic has been one of the greatest challenges faced for a very long time. However, it has also presented educators with novel opportunities for teaching, none more so than in science. There are the obvious links between COVID-19 and the body of scientific knowledge that curriculum designers think educators should help students to…
Descriptors: COVID-19, Pandemics, Science Education, Science Process Skills
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Elia Bergamin; Giacomo Fabris; Matteo Neffat; Paola Baron Toaldo; Daniela De Luchi; Renato Bonomi – Journal of Chemical Education, 2023
A class of 18 students attending the last year of an Italian high school was divided into groups and performed the extraction of pigments contained in hibiscus tea. Each group worked at a different temperature and carried out multiple extractions using distilled water as a solvent. By means of UV-vis spectroscopy it was possible to determine the…
Descriptors: Chemistry, Spectroscopy, Scientific Concepts, Secondary School Science
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Alexander Grushow – Journal of Chemical Education, 2022
A revised version of a traditional physical chemistry laboratory experiment has been developed to enhance student discussion in the laboratory and to improve students' connections between physical chemistry concepts and real molecular systems. In this experiment, students explore the keto-enol tautomerization of 2,4-pentanedione. However, unlike…
Descriptors: Chemistry, Science Experiments, Laboratory Experiments, Inquiry
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Rovšek, Barbara – Physics Education, 2020
This paper is about an experimental problem on forced oscillations, which was given to 14-year-old primary school pupils at the Slovenian national (final) level of the physics competition in April 2019. At the time when the competition took place these pupils were approaching the end of the school year, when they encountered physics as a school…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Science Experiments, Elementary School Students, Mechanics (Physics)
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Keller, Philip – Physics Teacher, 2019
Before students learn Kirchhoff's rules, they are typically taught how to solve "combined series-parallel" circuits. The method presented in many textbooks begins by drawing a series of simplified circuits, replacing series and/or parallel elements with their equivalent resistances, eventually reducing the circuit to a voltage source and…
Descriptors: Physics, Equipment, Energy, Problem Solving
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Niu Huang; Chao Li; Shili Gan; Cancan Le; Huan Liu; Wei Liu; Liqun Ye – Journal of Chemical Education, 2022
With the benefits of low cost, energy efficiency, and environmental protection, photocatalytic hydrogen production is considered to be the most promising technology for the development of a clean and sustainable society. However, the utilization of photocatalytically generated hydrogen is not very common yet. Therefore, tertiary education urgently…
Descriptors: Undergraduate Students, College Science, Chemistry, Botany
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Hamilton, Nicholas B.; Remington, Jacob M.; Schneebeli, Severin T.; Li, Jianing – Journal of Chemical Education, 2022
We reported a redesign of a physical chemistry laboratory course (CHEM 166) for our chemistry majors at the University of Vermont carried out during the COVID-19 pandemic. We started to teach this course after a curriculum reform, which split an upper-division undergraduate laboratory course into physical and analytical chemistry laboratories. To…
Descriptors: Outcome Based Education, Chemistry, Science Laboratories, Science Curriculum
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Geske, Matthew – Physics Teacher, 2019
Many introductory physics courses begin with the teaching of motion and kinematics. This naturally leads to the use of constant acceleration equations to solve various problems involving common motions (free fall being a notable example). Students can sometimes get the impression that these equations are the only thing they need to remember in…
Descriptors: Physics, Science Instruction, Scientific Concepts, Introductory Courses
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Frensley, John – Physics Teacher, 2019
Traditional high school physics instruction often comes across as a mere extension of the mathematics classroom to many of our students. Solving numerical physics problems using structures such as the GUESS method (given, unknown, equation, substitute, solve) doesn't help students with conceptual understanding. With the advent of physics education…
Descriptors: High School Students, Secondary School Science, Physics, Science Process Skills
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Barrera, Luis A.; Alma C. Escobosa; Alsaihati, Laila S.; Noveron, Juan C. – Journal of Chemical Education, 2019
Herein we present a modified iodine clock experiment which replaces starch with cellulose paper. This provides the reaction with a white solid surface in which color change can be clearly observed and reduces reagent amounts required to 540 µL per group. After data acquisition, students are required to calculate reaction orders and the reaction…
Descriptors: Science Experiments, Chemistry, Kinetics, Science Laboratories
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Patel, Parth H.; Conrad, Kristofer L.; Pathiranage, Anuradha L.; Hiatt, Leslie A. – Journal of Chemical Education, 2020
Given student familiarity with electronic cigarettes (e-cigs), this lab uses a student-built smoke collection apparatus to collect e-cig vapors to teach students about gas chromatography-mass spectrometry (GC-MS). Students in a second semester, introductory organic chemistry course spent 1 week collecting e-cig vapors and 1 week qualitatively…
Descriptors: Organic Chemistry, Smoking, Electronic Equipment, Science Experiments
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Scott, Lynne – Primary Science, 2019
Children in most schools, especially in Primary 7 (age 11, England Year 6), are increasingly engaging with technology and social media in a way that is completely different from 10 or even 5 years ago. More time is spent on phones and devices and, as a result of this, observations and appreciation of the wonderful natural world around them are…
Descriptors: Grade 5, Resilience (Psychology), Learner Engagement, Foreign Countries
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