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Corsiglia, Giaco; Pollock, Steven; Passante, Gina – Physical Review Physics Education Research, 2023
Broadly speaking, many physicists value intuition in their work, and many instructors hope their students develop intuition (while possibly being wary of their initial, unrefined intuitions). These considerations are especially relevant in quantum mechanics, a subject many see as counterintuitive because it is removed from classical everyday…
Descriptors: Mechanics (Physics), Quantum Mechanics, Student Attitudes, Intuition
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Seithers, Laura C.; Hyson, Audrey Rose; Hull, Kerry; Jensen, Murray S. – Electronic Journal for Research in Science & Mathematics Education, 2020
This article examines the backgrounds and pedagogical evolution of twelve community college (CC) human anatomy and physiology faculty participating in a larger study known as the Community College Anatomy and Physiology Education Research (CAPER) project. Using qualitative analysis of interviews based on Luft & Roehrig's (2007) Teacher Belief…
Descriptors: Anatomy, Physiology, Community Colleges, College Faculty
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Lombardi, Doug; Bickel, Elliot S.; Bailey, Janelle M.; Burrell, Shondricka – Science Education, 2018
Evaluation is an important aspect of science and is receiving increasing attention in science education. The present study investigated (1) changes to plausibility judgments and knowledge as a result of a series of instructional scaffolds, called model-evidence link activities, that facilitated evaluation of scientific and alternative models in…
Descriptors: High School Students, Science Instruction, Earth Science, Knowledge Level
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Elliott, Katrina; Pillman, Anne – Teaching Science, 2016
This paper explores strategies for teachers to work with science conceptions, both those consistent and those inconsistent with western science understanding. It emphasises the value of teachers checking their own and their students' prior understanding of concepts to be learnt. A past approach of educators has been to replace old beliefs with new…
Descriptors: Science Instruction, Teaching Methods, Scientific Attitudes, Misconceptions
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Alston, Daniel M.; Marshall, Jeff. C.; Zambak, V. Serbay – Science Educator, 2017
One could argue that attitudes, knowledge, beliefs, and differing definitions and perceptions can all affect science teachers' motivation to engage in inquiry practices. Better understanding what motivates science teachers' instructional behaviors can result in improved efforts by researchers to align their instruction with quality inquiry-based…
Descriptors: Science Instruction, Middle School Teachers, Secondary School Science, Expectation
Everman, Daphne Jane – ProQuest LLC, 2016
The purpose of this study was to investigate the thoughts, feelings, and beliefs held by teacher candidates (TCs) regarding the integration of fictional literature into elementary science instruction. Data were collected in the forms of a Q sort completed by two sections of TCs as an in-class activity, demographics and background information…
Descriptors: Elementary School Science, Science Instruction, Integrated Curriculum, Student Teacher Attitudes
Vinaja, Sean Stephen – ProQuest LLC, 2016
Many Christian students graduate from secondary schools and enter Christian colleges with worldviews that are unbiblical or contain unbiblical components, many of which stem from their beliefs regarding origins. Little research has been done to study the effect of gender on the role of a young-earth creationist (YEC) origins course in shaping…
Descriptors: Gender Differences, Undergraduate Students, Christianity, Creationism
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Browning, Emma; Hohenstein, Jill – Education 3-13, 2015
This study explores learning about evolution when information is presented in either a narrative or an expository text (ET). Narratives engage the imagination, and consequently may allow children to overcome conceptual constraints that make evolution difficult to comprehend. Participants were 16 Year One, 21 Year Two and 25 Year Three pupils from…
Descriptors: Elementary School Students, Science Instruction, Imagination, Evolution
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Kagan, Taryn; Sanders, Martie – African Journal of Research in Mathematics, Science and Technology Education, 2013
This paper reports on an investigation of two inter-related but different matters, one of interest to science education researchers and teachers in general, and the other to those teaching about evolution. The first was motivated by the dilemma facing teachers who want to diagnose learners' prior knowledge before teaching and are concerned about…
Descriptors: Evolution, Science Instruction, Jews, Judaism
Touchman, Stephanie – ProQuest LLC, 2012
Collaborative learning is a common teaching strategy in classrooms across age groups and content areas. It is important to measure and understand the cognitive process involved during collaboration to improve teaching methods involving interactive activities. This research attempted to answer the question: why do students learn more in…
Descriptors: Cooperative Learning, Biology, Science Instruction, Two Year College Students
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Kohnle, Antje; Mclean, Stewart; Aliotta, Marialuisa – European Journal of Physics, 2011
Understanding students' prior beliefs in nuclear physics is a first step towards improving nuclear physics instruction. This paper describes the development of a diagnostic survey in nuclear physics covering the areas of radioactive decay, binding energy, properties of the nuclear force and nuclear reactions, that was administered to students at…
Descriptors: Nuclear Physics, Test Construction, Misconceptions, Science Instruction
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Balgopal, Meena M.; Montplaisir, Lisa M. – Instructional Science: An International Journal of the Learning Sciences, 2011
The process of reflective writing can play a central role in making meaning as learners process new information and connect it to prior knowledge. An examination of the written discourse can therefore be revealing of learners' cognitive understanding and affective (beliefs, feelings, motivation to learn) responses to concepts. Despite reflective…
Descriptors: College Science, Prior Learning, Learning Motivation, Ecology
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Taber, Keith S.; Billingsley, Berry; Riga, Fran; Newdick, Helen – Science Education, 2011
It has been argued that learning science may be complicated, and even compromised, when students hold worldviews that may seem at odds with what is presented in science lessons. In particular, in some parts of the world, there has been considerable concern that students from particular religious backgrounds may reject some science teaching if…
Descriptors: Curriculum Development, Conflict, Religion, Science Instruction
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Brand, Brenda R.; Glasson, George E. – Journal of Research in Science Teaching, 2004
The purpose of this ethnographic study was to explore the development of belief systems as related to racial and ethnic identities of preservice teachers as they crossed cultural borders into science teaching. Data were collected throughout a yearlong teacher preparation program to learn how early life experiences and racial and ethnic identities…
Descriptors: Classrooms, Beliefs, Preservice Teachers, Ethnography