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Clara Snow; Michael Messina – Journal of Chemical Education, 2024
The Uncertainty Principle is usually discussed twice in a Quantum Chemistry course. The first discussion is a "pre-wave function" explanation that occurs before students know about wave functions, but "do" know the de Broglie hypothesis. The second description of the Uncertainty Principle is "post-wave function",…
Descriptors: Science Education, Chemistry, Quantum Mechanics, Scientific Concepts
Miguel Reina; Herve´ This; Antonio Reina – Journal of Chemical Education, 2024
Despite the efforts from the International Union of Pure and Applied Chemistry (IUPAC) and from chemistry educators, misconceptions in the classroom and among professionals arise from the inherent complexity of chemical language and the remaining traces of the historical development of chemistry as a science. In order to improve the learning and…
Descriptors: Chemistry, Academic Language, Scientific Concepts, Science Instruction
Khdir Ahmed Othman; Rebaz Anwar Omer; Abdalla Ali Amin Mohammad; Damir A. Safin – Journal of Chemical Education, 2024
Functional group analysis is an essential part of the curriculum for identifying unknown organic compounds. However, traditional methods of analyzing functional groups use excess reagents and generate a large amount of waste material that is difficult to dispose of. This work is focused on alternative methods for detecting functional groups such…
Descriptors: Organic Chemistry, Science Education, Scientific Concepts, Evaluation Methods
Júlio J. Conde; Pablo Á. Meira-Cartea – Australian Journal of Environmental Education, 2024
The Kigali Amendment introduced a new family of chemical compounds, which do not contribute to stratospheric ozone depletion but present a high global warming potential, under the watch of the Montreal Protocol in 2016. Earlier this year, a press note from the World Meteorological Organization entitled "Ozone layer recovery is on track,…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Scientific Concepts, Chemistry, Pollution
Ângelo Luís; Fernanda Domingues – Biochemistry and Molecular Biology Education, 2025
Bacteria have developed a cell-to-cell communication system called quorum sensing (QS), allowing them to regulate group behavior and synchronize the expression of virulence factors, responsible for increasing their infection capacity and resistance to antimicrobials. Although the control of microbial infections through the inhibition of microbial…
Descriptors: Inhibition, Evaluation Methods, Science Experiments, Microbiology
The Real Reason Why ATP Hydrolysis Is Spontaneous at pH > 7: It's (Mostly) the Proton Concentration!
Silverstein, Todd P. – Biochemistry and Molecular Biology Education, 2023
Common wisdom holds that ATP hydrolysis is spontaneous because of the weakness of its phosphoanhydride bonds, electrostatic repulsion within the polyanionic ATP[superscript 4]-molecule, and resonance stabilization of the inorganic phosphate and ADP products. By examining the pH-dependence of the hydrolysis Gibbs free energy, we show that in fact,…
Descriptors: Biochemistry, Molecular Biology, Science Education, Scientific Concepts
Marissa L. Clapson; Shauna Schechtel; Brian Gilbert; Vivian Janet Mozol – Journal of Chemical Education, 2023
Gamification of learning in chemistry education is a growing field. Chemistry themed escape room activities, incorporating course learning objectives into puzzle solution, have become a popular tool allowing for students to apply course knowledge in novel settings. Escape room activities, like their public counterparts, provide subtle guidance to…
Descriptors: Scientific Concepts, Chemistry, Gamification, Teaching Methods
Thalles Henrique Faria de Souza; Eduardo Figueiredo Peloso; Gabriel Gerber Hornink – Biochemistry and Molecular Biology Education, 2025
Understanding ATP formation is essential for learning metabolism and is central to grasping metabolic processes as a whole. However, due to the high level of abstraction, the number of intermediate substrates, the connections, and integrated regulation, its comprehension often poses a challenge. This and the fact that traditional teaching methods…
Descriptors: Educational Games, Game Based Learning, Biochemistry, Science Instruction
Russell McPhee; Damian Cox – Educational Philosophy and Theory, 2025
Critical thinking is often nominated as a graduate attribute, a learning outcome, and is even offered as a discrete subject in schools and universities. Therefore, it is important to gain clarity about the fundamental goal or purpose of critical thinking education. What should instructors be aiming at when they seek to instil critical thinking in…
Descriptors: Critical Thinking, Intellectual Freedom, Personal Autonomy, Inquiry
John L. Rudolph – Journal of Research in Science Teaching, 2024
It has been widely accepted in the science education research community that scientific literacy as a concept and phrase was introduced by Paul deHart Hurd in 1958. Recent research into the origins of the phrase, however, has shown this to be incorrect. Its first published use can be traced back, in fact, to 1945, and the phrase was frequently…
Descriptors: Scientific Literacy, Science Education, Objectives, Educational History
Ginnobili, Santiago; González Galli, Leonardo; Ariza, Yefrin – Science & Education, 2022
We argue that teleological thinking plays a central role in biology and, more specifically, in theory of natural selection, and, therefore, the didactic goal cannot be its unnuanced elimination. In this sense, we will suggest that students' teleological views can be used as the starting point for the construction of knowledge in this area of…
Descriptors: Misconceptions, Scientific Concepts, Student Attitudes, Cognitive Processes
White, Joel – Educational Philosophy and Theory, 2022
The conceptual gambit of this article is to propose that the notion of anti-entropy should be complemented by that of exergy investment or destruction, a term first proposed by Zoran Rant in 1956. It argues that one of Bernard Stiegler's most important interventions into deconstruction is the thermodynamic reformulation of Derridean…
Descriptors: Scientific Concepts, Thermodynamics, Educational Philosophy, Energy
Katherine Landau Wright; Julianne Wenner; Tracey S. Hodges – Reading Teacher, 2024
One strategy for developing science literacy and scientific literacy in young children is through published trade books. To better understand how science literacy and scientific literacy may be represented in elementary classrooms, we investigated children's books that explore science concepts. Specifically, we examined high-quality science trade…
Descriptors: Books, Misinformation, Scientific Literacy, Elementary School Students
Howard, Andrew J. – Biochemistry and Molecular Biology Education, 2023
Most textbooks and lecturers present Michaelis-Menten kinetics using the equation v = V[subscript max][S]/(K[subscript m] + [S]). There are advantages to presenting this relationship in a slightly different form, namely v = V[subscript max]/{1 + (K[subscript m]/[S])}. We articulate advantages for single-substrate reactions and extend the formalism…
Descriptors: Science Instruction, Kinetics, Equations (Mathematics), Teaching Methods
Brock, Richard; Kampourakis, Kostas – Science & Education, 2023
Scientific teleological explanations cite end states as causes to account for physical phenomena. Researchers in science education have noted that students can use teleological explanations in ways that are illegitimate, for example, by implying that inanimate objects are acting intentionally. Despite such cases, several examples of legitimate…
Descriptors: Physics, Science Education, Epistemology, Philosophy