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Lightbody, Mary – Science Scope, 2011
Students come to class with diverse experiences and backgrounds, and the author tries to take advantage of that diversity in the plant unit. Every year the author secures the help of the two or three green thumbs or green-thumb wannabes to help take care of the collection of plants she brings from home in the fall. The author also invites students…
Descriptors: Classroom Environment, Individualized Instruction, Inquiry, Plants (Botany)
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Gooding, Julia; Metz, Bill – Science Scope, 2011
Having students design their own methods regarding data collection during a lab may help them formulate appropriate investigative procedures. The authors use a modified gallery walk to develop science skills. (Contains 3 figures.)
Descriptors: Science Process Skills, Science Activities, Scientific Methodology, Science Education
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Callis, Kristine; Henkel, Melissa; Lund, Rachael – Science Scope, 2010
The objective of the termite experiment is to walk students through the process of designing and conducting an experiment while allowing them to use inquiry-based methods to infer why, in this lab, termites follow the line of blue Bic or Paper Mate brand ballpoint pens. This experiment also reinforces the concept of observation versus inference…
Descriptors: Animals, Inquiry, Scientific Attitudes, Science Process Skills
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Plankis, Brian; Vowell, Julie; Ramsey, John – Science Scope, 2011
One key element sometimes missing from middle school science lessons is questioning designed to generate student discourse. The National Science Teachers Association recommends that the curriculum of middle school science programs includes "hands-on, minds-on" (NSTA 2003) inquiry-based science instruction, and according to Clough and Olson,…
Descriptors: Science Process Skills, Science Instruction, Secondary School Science, Middle Schools
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Stier, Sam – Science Scope, 2010
Sampling, very generally, is the process of learning about something by selecting and assessing representative parts of that population or object. In the inquiry activity described here, students learned about sampling techniques as they estimated the number of trees greater than 12 cm dbh (diameter at breast height) in a wooded, discrete area…
Descriptors: Learning Activities, Sampling, Science Process Skills, Inquiry
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Bembenic, Meredith Hill; Cratsley, Chira Endress; Hartwell, Bradley; Guertin, Laura; Furman, Tanya – Science Scope, 2012
As the United States strives to achieve energy independence, students need to be literate about energy and environmental issues. In this article, the authors present a lesson about the nation's electricity resources that is part 1 of a free, comprehensive unit on coal and energy that is available online (http://tinyurl.com/coalenergyunit). The…
Descriptors: Environmental Education, Fuels, Energy, Graduate Students
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Bigham, Gary – Science Scope, 2010
Off-road motorcycle racing and ATV riding. Gardening and fishing. What do these high-adrenaline and slower-paced pastimes have in common? Each requires soil, and the texture of that soil has an effect on all of them. In the inquiry-based lessons described here, students work both in the field or laboratory and in the classroom to collect soil…
Descriptors: Soil Science, Science Instruction, Inquiry, Teaching Methods
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Brockway, Debra; Papaleo, Marie – Science Scope, 2009
The International Boiling Point Project is an online, collaborative project for students in grades 6-12 in which they investigate the impact of four factors (room temperature, elevation, volume of water and heating device) on the boiling point of water. A detailed procedure is provided for students in order to limit the number of variables…
Descriptors: Cohort Analysis, Secondary Education, Science Process Skills, Inquiry
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Nargund, Vanashri; Rogers, Meredith A. Park – Science Scope, 2009
Learning how the periodic table has developed over time can provide an important foundation for students' future science learning, as they begin to explore the explanatory power of other models in science. In this activity, students are given the opportunity to investigate the generation of the modern periodic table, through a process of creating…
Descriptors: Scientific Principles, Chemistry, Active Learning, Inquiry
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Bourdeau, Virginia; Arnold, Mary E. – Science Scope, 2008
The Oregon 4-H Wildlife Stewards program has been training teachers and volunteers to convert school grounds to education sites by constructing schoolyard wildlife habitats since 1997. The publication "What Can We Learn at the Pond? 4-H Wildlife Stewards Master Leader Guide" (Bourdeau 2004a) was written to support the program's focus on developing…
Descriptors: Environmental Education, Wildlife, Science Activities, Inquiry
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Elwess, Nancy L.; Bouchard, Adam – Science Scope, 2007
In this inquiry-based activity, Roborovsky hamsters are used to provide students with an opportunity to develop their skills of analysis, inquiry, and design. These hamsters are easy to maintain, yet offer students a means to use conventional techniques and those of their own design to make further observations through measuring, assessing, and…
Descriptors: Science Activities, Inquiry, Animals, Science Instruction
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Schultz, Bryan; Yates, Crystal; Schultz, Jayne M. – Science Scope, 2008
To help eighth-grade students experience the excitement of Earth science research, the authors developed an inquiry-based project in which students evaluated and cataloged their campus geology and soils. Following class discussions of rock-weathering and soil-forming processes, students worked in groups to excavate multiple soil pits in the school…
Descriptors: Soil Science, Geology, Earth Science, Grade 8
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Peters, Erin – Science Scope, 2008
Assessing student-led, open-ended scientific inquiry holds a unique problem for classroom teachers because of the diverse skills and content that emerge from student work. This article provides tangible strategies for teachers to assess divergent student-generated inquiry in a manner that is manageable for teachers, informative for students, and…
Descriptors: Science Instruction, Inquiry, Student Projects, Evaluation Methods
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Farenga, Stephen J.; Joyce, Beverly A.; Wilkens, Richard; Ness, Daniel – Science Scope, 2003
Discusses the importance of observation in science education, how to foster students' observation skills in the classroom, and how to facilitate what they observe when learning. Includes a list of components of good scientific observing. (KHR)
Descriptors: Inquiry, Learning Strategies, Middle Schools, Observation
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Tretter, Thomas – Science Scope, 2005
In the spirit of the National Science Education Standards (NRC 1996), many teachers attempt to have their students experience science in a constructivist, inquiry-oriented manner. The egg bungee jump activity will certainly support that mode of teaching, and has the added benefit of providing a concrete context within which students can explore…
Descriptors: Constructivism (Learning), Science Instruction, Inquiry, Teaching Methods
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