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Jessica M. Karch; Nicolette M. Maggiore; Jennifer R. Pierre-Louis; Destiny Strange; Vesal Dini; Ira Caspari-Gnann – Science Education, 2024
Small group interactions and interactions with near-peer instructors such as learning assistants serve as fertile opportunities for student learning in undergraduate active learning classrooms. To understand what students take away from these interactions, we need to understand how and what they learn during the moment of their interaction. This…
Descriptors: Teaching Assistants, Interaction, Active Learning, Electronic Learning
Wolf, Steven Frederick; Sprague, Mark W. – Physics Teacher, 2022
A significant challenge physics faculty face teaching introductory labs is engaging students in authentic science practices. Another has been highlighted given the current global pandemic--how to engage students in our laboratory courses while maintaining appropriate social distancing and hygiene standards. We have chosen to answer these…
Descriptors: Introductory Courses, Physics, Educational Change, Science Education
Mefferd, Kyle Castro; Bernacki, Matthew L. – Journal of Science Education and Technology, 2023
Digital environments like learning management systems can afford opportunities for students to engage in cognitive learning strategies including preparatory reading of advance organizers including lecture outlines and self-testing using ungraded quizzes. When timed appropriately, self-testing can afford distributed practice, an optimal approach to…
Descriptors: Undergraduate Students, Science Education, Cognitive Processes, Academic Achievement
Tyjuanna R. LaBennett – ProQuest LLC, 2024
The problem addressed through this study was the absence of a critical examination of laboratory exercises used with first-year nonbiology majors and the deployment of virtual laboratories in the biology department at the project site university without critical analyses associated with the efficacy of virtual labs. Grounded in Mayer's cognitive…
Descriptors: Science Laboratories, Laboratory Experiments, Science Education, Electronic Learning
Emily Faulconer; Cheryl Kam – Quarterly Review of Distance Education, 2023
An uptick in online enrollments at higher institutions in recent years serves as the driving force behind an increase in the number of science courses available online. The shift to online science courses introduced a new laboratory environment vastly different from the traditional laboratory, giving rise to doubts on how safe these nontraditional…
Descriptors: Science Education, Online Courses, Electronic Learning, Laboratory Safety
Kelsey S. Bitting; Katherine Ryker; Rachel Teasdale – Journal of Geoscience Education, 2024
Triggered situational interest in introductory courses can encourage student engagement, motivation, and value for the geosciences. In-person labs have traditionally played a unique role in triggering situational interest compared to lectures, but the COVID transition online disrupted these dynamics. We examine students' self-reported situational…
Descriptors: Measurement Techniques, Student Interests, Electronic Learning, Introductory Courses
Esra Simsek; Turkan Karakus Yilmaz – Open Praxis, 2025
This systematic review aims to analyze trends in academic studies evaluating online learning environments that incorporate gamification elements and the relationship between these elements and learning outcomes. A total of 24 theses and 41 articles, published between 2013 and 2021, were included in the study, selected based on predefined keywords…
Descriptors: Gamification, Electronic Learning, Online Courses, Outcomes of Education
Shea E. Carr – ProQuest LLC, 2024
Motivation, belonging, and inclusion are all critical factors for student success but can be difficult to support in asynchronous online courses. Active learning and required group work have been shown to increase student motivation in in-person and synchronous online courses, but little is known about their impact in online asynchronous settings.…
Descriptors: Electronic Learning, Asynchronous Communication, Active Learning, Group Dynamics
Mohammed, Tasneem F.; Gin, Logan E.; Wiesenthal, Nicholas J.; Cooper, Katelyn M. – CBE - Life Sciences Education, 2022
Depression is one of the top mental health concerns among undergraduates and disproportionately affects students who are underrepresented in science. As such, understanding how emerging science learning environments, such as online science courses, affect students with depression is integral to creating a more inclusive scientific community. In…
Descriptors: Student Experience, Undergraduate Students, Depression (Psychology), Electronic Learning
Widodo, Wahono – Journal of Science Learning, 2022
During the COVID-19 pandemic, online learning should be carried out through innovative methods. This study aims to determine whether implementing an online flipped classroom, with converting all face-to-face sessions into virtual face-to-face sessions, can facilitate the development of critical thinking skills of postgraduate science education…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Graduate Students, Science Education, Flipped Classroom
Zoubeida R. Dagher; Christy Metzger – Contemporary Issues in Technology and Teacher Education (CITE Journal), 2024
This study analyzed elementary preservice teachers' (PST) participation in an equity-oriented digital clinical simulation administered in a science methods course. Using the Teacher Moments' open access platform, PSTs completed the simulation, To Intervene or Not, about two students from historically minoritized communities who appeared disengaged…
Descriptors: Preservice Teachers, Preservice Teacher Education, Electronic Learning, Clinical Experience
Nathan Ruhl – Journal of College Science Teaching, 2024
Helping students to understand complex processes is one of the core challenges in teaching biology courses. Concept mapping is a flexible pedagogical method that enables students to learn the complexities of a given subject while at the same time being versatile enough that instructors can easily pivot between instructional modalities and/or…
Descriptors: Concept Mapping, Teaching Methods, Scientific Concepts, Science Education
Faruk Arici; Riza Salar; Rabia Meryem Yilmaz – Technology, Knowledge and Learning, 2025
With the advancement of technology, traditional classroom environments have been increasingly replaced by technology-driven learning settings. This transition has been further accelerated by global crises such as wars, health emergencies, and economic instability, pushing education beyond conventional boundaries. Among these settings, e-learning…
Descriptors: Preservice Teachers, Science Teachers, Student Satisfaction, Correlation
Amy Danielle Hauver – ProQuest LLC, 2022
Learning is a complex, subjective process. An important perspective on learning is that anyone, regardless of their level of education, can participate in learning about science and contribute to their community. The public increasingly looks towards online resources to find answers to challenges, so it is necessary that people become empowered to…
Descriptors: Learning Processes, Models, Educational Principles, Lifelong Learning
Brown, Sherri – Electronic Journal for Research in Science & Mathematics Education, 2020
With the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic, the nation's universities and colleges required online learning and shelter-in-place/stay-at-home protocols for the end of Spring 2020 semester. This new reality resulted in the fact that my undergraduate elementary science methods course would not be held in our Title 1 urban elementary professional…
Descriptors: COVID-19, Pandemics, School Closing, Methods Courses