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Júlio Panzera-Gonçalves; Cleida Aparecida Oliveira – Anatomical Sciences Education, 2025
Learning Cell Biology is challenging for both sighted and visually impaired students due to its abstract nature and reliance on bidimensional depictions in textbooks, which often fail to capture the biological complexity of cell structures and functions. To implement inclusive learning environments and address the shortage of learning materials…
Descriptors: Teaching Methods, Computer Simulation, Anatomy, Science Education
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H. Martin; E. Eisner; J. K. Klosterman – Journal of Chemical Education, 2023
3D printers have facilitated a wealth of 3D printed molecular models illustrating key structural concepts for student learning. However, general adoption of 3D printed models in the organic chemistry classroom proceeds slowly as the majority of consumer-grade 3D (fused deposition modeling (FDM) and resin) printers are inherently monochromatic,…
Descriptors: Printing, Computer Peripherals, Molecular Structure, Organic Chemistry
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Gallegos-Cázares, Leticia; Flores-Camacho, Fernando; Calderón-Canales, Elena – Canadian Journal of Science, Mathematics and Technology Education, 2022
This study presents an analysis of the incommensurability about the representations or models elaborated by children from an Indigenous community within three areas or cultural domains, namely, the ethnic, daily (domestic), and school domains and their implications in relation to science education. The children belong to an Indigenous Nahuatl…
Descriptors: Models, Indigenous Populations, Science Education, American Indian Students
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Sportel, Samuel; Bruxvoort, Crystal; Jadrich, James – Science and Children, 2009
Conceptually, students are typically introduced to light as a type of wave. However, children struggle to understand this model because it is highly abstract. Light can be represented more concretely using the photon model. According to this scientific model, light emanates from sources as tiny "packets" of energy (called "photons") that move in…
Descriptors: Models, Teaching Methods, Light, Energy
Newman, John B. – 1986
An approach which is designed to help students better understand the utility of models in understanding and doing physics, specifically in a course in light and color, is described in this paper. Explanations are given and illustrations are provided of an analogue model of waves which assist in the creation of an abstract model to deduce Snell's…
Descriptors: College Science, Color, Higher Education, Light
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Lovett, David; Hore, Kevin – Physics Education, 1991
The model for color vision put forward by Edwin Land is explained. The aspects of the theory that can be demonstrated within the classroom are described. A random arrangement of straight-edged colored areas mounted on a screen, called a Mondrian, projectors, and a computer are used to calculate reflectance. (KR)
Descriptors: Color, Computer Uses in Education, Eyes, Human Body