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Ayuso Fernández, Gabriel Enrique; López-Banet, Luisa; Ruiz-Vidal, Alicia – EURASIA Journal of Mathematics, Science and Technology Education, 2022
One of the goals of secondary science education is to help students develop skills related to scientific inquiry. However, the results of previous studies have shown that students have difficulties in identifying problems, formulating hypotheses, drawing conclusions, and designing experiments. The main objective of this contribution is to indicate…
Descriptors: Secondary Education, Science Education, Inquiry, Foreign Countries
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de Souza, Renata Torres Mattos P.; Kasseboehmer, Ana Cla´udia – Journal of Chemical Education, 2022
This paper reports the development of a digital escape room for high school students using Genially, a web-based media platform. The escape room was used to aid understanding of basic concepts in chemistry and mostly enhance students' classes participation during the COVID-19 pandemic. The activity entitled "The thalidomide mystery"…
Descriptors: Science Education, Secondary School Science, Educational Games, High School Students
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Sanchez-Ruiz, Maria-Jose; Santos, Manuela Romo; Jiménez, Juan Jiménez – Creativity Research Journal, 2013
This article critically reviews the extant literature on scientific creativity and metaphorical thinking. Metaphorical thinking is based on a conceptual transfer of relationships or mapping, from a well-known source domain to a poorly known target domain, which could result in creative outcomes in sciences. Creativity leads to products that are…
Descriptors: Creativity, Concept Mapping, Concept Formation, Science Process Skills
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Rudge, David W.; Howe, Eric M. – Science & Education, 2009
Monk and Osborne ("Sci Educ" 81:405-424, 1997) provide a rigorous justification for why history and philosophy of science should be incorporated as an integral component of instruction and a model for how history of science should be used to promote learning of and about science. In the following essay we critique how history of science is used on…
Descriptors: Teaching Methods, Scientific Principles, Problem Solving, Scientists
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Baumgartner, Erin – Journal of College Science Teaching, 2010
Preservice preparation courses for elementary teachers of science can provide opportunities to build pedagogical content knowledge. One common concern of preservice teachers is how to cope with a preplanned lesson that does not proceed as planned. Providing opportunities for preservice teachers to experience the unexpected actually immerses them…
Descriptors: Preservice Teachers, Teacher Education Curriculum, Science Teachers, Pedagogical Content Knowledge
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Watson, Scott B.; James, Linda – Science Scope, 2004
While the scientific method is a logical, orderly way to solve a problem or answer a question, it is not a magical formula that is too complicated for nonscientists to comprehend (Keeton and Gould 1986). The scientific method may include a variety of steps, processes, and definitions. It should not be seen as a single series of steps, with no…
Descriptors: Scientific Methodology, Problem Solving, Science Education
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West, Martha – Young Children, 2007
West outlines the scientific method as a proven problem-solving method for young children across the curriculum and in all areas of life and learning. She emphasizes that doing, thinking, and talking with peers when problem solving are as important as writing conclusions. The article walks readers through a second grade class's experiment in…
Descriptors: Drills (Practice), Social Studies, Public Education, Problem Solving
Hall, Gene E. – Sci Teacher, 1969
Descriptors: Hypothesis Testing, Inquiry, Instruction, Problem Solving
Gorman, Michael E. – 1984
In a previous study (Watson, 1960), college students were told that a three-number string ("2, 4, 6") conformed to a rule and that they had to guess the rule by proposing other three-number strings; they were then told whether each guess was right or wrong. However, it was suspected that, since the subject's hypothesis was falsified by…
Descriptors: Feedback, Higher Education, Hypothesis Testing, Problem Solving
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Niaz, Mansoor – Interchange, 1993
The paper critically appraises the concept-learning and developmental perspectives in science education to show that Pascual-Leone's Theory of Constructive Operators leads to a progressive problem-shift between Piaget's epistemic subject and Pascual-Leone's metasubject. (SM)
Descriptors: Heuristics, Higher Education, Problem Solving, Science Education
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Laitinen, Herbert A., Ed. – Analytical Chemistry, 1979
Discusses the proposition that rarely does an investigation follow the orderly and systematic course suggested by the scientific method. The most vital elements are not the experimental and theoretical tools of science, but human ingenuity and intuition. (BT)
Descriptors: Discovery Processes, Humanism, Investigations, Methods
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Hailman, Jack P. – American Biology Teacher, 1975
Presents a schema to replace the generally accepted notion of the scientific method being described as an individual scientist's behavior. The schema is described as the summary process by which scientific understanding of the universe is advanced, how knowledge is created and tested, and how workable models emerge. (EB)
Descriptors: Biology, Instruction, Models, Problem Solving
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Cooper, Sylvia L. – Science Teacher, 2001
Introduces an activity in which students design and experiment to determine the mass of a sample of copper without using a balance. Uses water displacement to find the mass of copper. (YDS)
Descriptors: Chemistry, Density (Matter), Problem Solving, Research Design
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Lenox, Ronald S. – Journal of Chemical Education, 1985
Methods used to investigate problems in the sciences include building-up strategies, insight, and change (or serendipitous discovery). Discusses appropriate learning experiences for the undergraduate science students so they are more likely to benefit from the second method of scientific discovery as they make a career in their chosen field. (JN)
Descriptors: College Science, Discovery Processes, Higher Education, Problem Solving
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Wolf, Walter A., Ed. – Journal of Chemical Education, 1979
Students are learning too many facts, and not enough emphasis is being placed on observational skills. An activity is suggested for college students which shows how observations are made and problems formulated from them. (BB)
Descriptors: Chemistry, College Science, Educational Philosophy, Higher Education
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