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Marcus Harmes – History of Education Review, 2024
Purpose: The purpose of this paper is to study the popular educational broadcasting of Julius Sumner Miller and its intersections with contemporary science policy and education. Design/methodology/approach: The paper draws on archival research including resources so far unused by historians of science or of broadcasting and audio-visual resources…
Descriptors: Science Education, Science and Society, Telecommunications, Programming (Broadcast)
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Ozer Aytekin, Kamile – European Journal of Educational Research, 2020
Knowledge is an essential part of the continuity of humanity. Access to science is through knowledge and vice versa. Children are mostly preoccupied with television, mainly with children's programs on television channels especially cartoons. Cartoons are produced in order to entertain children and to contribute to their development and maturation.…
Descriptors: Cartoons, Mass Media, Television, Programming (Broadcast)
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Brake, Mark; Griffiths, Martin – Physics Education, 2009
Radio broadcasting offers a unique opportunity to reach the public and facilitate their entertainment and education. In this vein, a series of high profile lectures in honour of Sir John Reith was initiated by the BBC in 1948 as a way of introducing the public to some of the greatest scientists of the age, enabling such thinkers to spread a…
Descriptors: Radio, Programming (Broadcast), Scientists, Science History
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Villanueva, Mary Grace; Hand, Brian – Science Scope, 2011
Science teachers and graduate students have developed activities and assessment tools that begin to help students make the distinction between data and evidence. Two activities are covered in this article. (Contains 1 resource and 2 figures.)
Descriptors: Data, Evidence, Comparative Analysis, Science Education
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Terzian, Sevan G. – Paedagogica Historica: International Journal of the History of Education, 2008
From 1942 to 1958, a national weekly programme on CBS radio and presented by Science Service, Inc. devoted 37 of its broadcasts to profiling American high school students' achievements in science talent searches, clubs and fairs. These "Adventures in Science" radio programmes cast scientifically talented youth as potential contributors to national…
Descriptors: National Security, Academically Gifted, Talent, War
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Deavor, James P. – Journal of Chemical Education, 2001
Explains how to use the "Who Wants to Be a Millionaire" TV show to teach general organic biochemistry to liberal arts students. (YDS)
Descriptors: Chemistry, Higher Education, Programming (Broadcast), Science Education
Hutto, David N. – 2000
This narrative describes the processes and technologies employed to produce and deliver a series of complex interactive learning experiences that brought together working scientists in Antarctic and students and teachers across North America. This multifaceted program included field production in the Antarctic, the use of experimental…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Higher Education, Instructional Materials, Interactive Television