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Georgios Ampatzidis; Marida Ergazaki – Science & Education, 2024
Although formulating a broadly accepted definition of scientific literacy may be challenging, it is widely recognized that Nature of Science (NOS) is an essential component of it. There are different ways to define NOS. In some cases, NOS can be conceptualized through a number of general NOS aspects like for instance science's empirical basis or…
Descriptors: Science Education, Botany, Scientific Literacy, Science History
Israel Rosalino; Ana Cláudia Kasseboehmer – Science & Education, 2024
Museums and science centers are constantly changing scientific environments which exert a lasting positive impact on the society through the popularization of science. One of the most effective strategies employed by these science popularization venues is the organization of scientific exhibitions using scientific devices which are presented to…
Descriptors: Museums, Questionnaires, Epistemology, Test Construction
Bussotti, Paolo – International Baltic Symposium on Science and Technology Education, 2023
In this research, an educational approach to the concept of energy is proposed. It is based on the history of physics. In 1854 Hermann Hemlholtz gave a popular lecture on the recent discovery that energy is conserved. Such lecture is used as a guide to introduce the pupils within several nuances of this concept. Not much mathematics is used, so…
Descriptors: Scientific Concepts, Energy, Science History, Physics
Evans, James P. – American Biology Teacher, 2022
Although unrecognized for his scientific achievements during his life, Gregor Mendel pioneered our modern understanding of the gene, work that shaped the field of genetics and advances in biology and medicine. The field that he set in motion 200 years ago lies at the center of current ethical debates about the future of humanity, the limits of…
Descriptors: Science History, Scientists, Heredity, Genetics
Noguera-Solano, Ricardo; Rodríguez-Caso, Juan Manuel; Ruiz-Gutiérrez, Rosaura – Science & Education, 2021
The name Lamarck is very well known in the teaching of biology, being associated with an early effort to explain evolution. Nevertheless, when evolution is taught in the classroom, the only Lamarckian ideas that stand out are related to the 'inheritance of acquired characters', invariably illustrated by the example of the lengthening of giraffes'…
Descriptors: Biology, Evolution, Scientific Concepts, Science Instruction
Bruna Navarone Santos; Lucia de La Rocque; Isabela Cabral Félix de Sousa; Tokie Anme – Journal of International Students, 2025
In this paper, we investigate how cultural, historical, and emotional factors influence scientific concepts in Brazil's Scientific Vocation Program (Provoc) and Japan's Sakura Science Program. It analyzes how Western and Eastern views of science might shape program goals through high school students' reports. Science education, history and…
Descriptors: Scientific Concepts, Secondary School Science, High School Students, Foreign Countries
Zevenhuizen, Erik – American Biology Teacher, 2022
In 1900, three botanists claimed they had found regularities in inheritance, which soon would be known as Mendel's Laws, without knowing the work of Gregor Mendel or of each other. Their claims of independent (re)discovery have been thoroughly studied during the past decades, with various outcomes. The case is still of interest today as it offers…
Descriptors: Science Instruction, Science History, Heredity, Genetics
Lincoln, Don – Physics Teacher, 2021
The theory of the Big Bang is accepted nearly universally among the scientific community. However, there is a small cadre of individuals who dispute this consensus and they point to a handful of datums that don't fit into the picture. One such datum is the existence of a star with an age reported to be older than the cosmos itself. This star is…
Descriptors: Astronomy, Science Instruction, Science History, Theories
Billingsley, Brianna R.; Christenson, Cory W. – Physics Teacher, 2022
A popular introductory physics laboratory experiment is one focusing on Snell's law. This is straightforward to complete with lasers and prisms, but here we present an alternative version that guides the students through some of the major historical developments, recreating and analyzing significant experiments. The discovery of Snell's law has a…
Descriptors: Physics, Science Laboratories, Laboratory Experiments, Scientific Principles
Lincoln, Don – Physics Teacher, 2021
The history of particle physics can be considered nothing less than a huge triumph for science. Over the course of a little more than a century of effort, our understanding of the world of atomic and subatomic physics went from a vague understanding of atoms, to one that is much more detailed. Early in this hundred-year-long period, we learned…
Descriptors: Physics, Science History, Laboratory Equipment, Science Laboratories
Pinochet, Jorge – Physics Education, 2020
Einstein's theory of general relativity (GR) provides the best available description of gravity. The recent detection of gravitational waves and the first picture of a black hole have provided spectacular confirmations of GR, as well as arousing substantial interest in topics related to gravitation. However, to understand present and future…
Descriptors: Physics, Scientific Concepts, Scientific Principles, Theories
Hopper, Amy J.; Beswick-Jones, Hana; Brown, Angus M. – Advances in Physiology Education, 2022
The five papers published by Hodgkin and Huxley in 1952 are seminal works in the field of physiology, earning their authors the Nobel Prize in 1963 and ushering in the era of membrane biophysics. The papers present a considerable challenge to the novice student, but this has been partly allayed by recent publications that have updated the…
Descriptors: Physiology, Science Instruction, Science History, Science Experiments
Hernández, Irene Tovar; Vaquero, José Manuel – Physics Teacher, 2023
Old physics textbooks give us a great opportunity to learn about the history of science and rediscover different methods to teach physics to our students. There are many disused and forgotten experiments in them, but these can still be very useful to affirm and understand physics. This is the case of an instrument used in the 19th century to…
Descriptors: Science Education, Physics, Science History, Scientific Concepts
Cooke, Helen; Dobbs, Heidi L.; Haxton, Katherine; Parmeggiani, Fabio; Skerratt, Glynn – Journal of Chemical Education, 2021
Joseph Priestley, discoverer of oxygen, lived in Nantwich, Cheshire, UK, from 1758 to 1761. In 2019, an exhibition featuring his life and achievements, and also celebrating the International Year of the Periodic Table, was developed by the Nantwich Museum. The historical research of Priestley's life, development of the exhibition, and rationale…
Descriptors: Chemistry, Scientific Concepts, History Instruction, Museums
Pinochet, Jorge – Physics Education, 2020
The objective of this second part of the work is to present heuristic derivations of the three classical tests of general relativity. These derivations are based on the Einstein equivalence principle and use Newtonian physics as a theoretical framework. The results obtained are close to Einstein's original predictions. Historical and anecdotal…
Descriptors: Physics, Scientific Concepts, Scientific Principles, Theories