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Follows, Mike – Physics Education, 2018
The 1969 version of "The Italian Job" is used as context for teaching turning forces and introducing or enhancing the understanding of equilibrium and Newton's Third Law of Motion. A Harrington Legionnaire coach is used as the getaway vehicle for a gold heist and the film ends on a genuine cliffhanger, with the rear half of the coach…
Descriptors: Physics, Science Instruction, Teaching Methods, Scientific Principles
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Geelan, David R.; Taylor, Peter C. – Electronic Journal of Science Education, 2001
Makes a case for an alternative epistemology of research based on the hermeneutic-phenomenology of Max van Manen (1990). This interpretive approach to understanding the nature of a social phenomenon involves the researcher in making explicit the meaning of a particular lived experience and generating a pedagogical thoughtfulness in readers.…
Descriptors: Elementary Secondary Education, Hermeneutics, Science Education, Scientific Principles
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Cherif, Abour; Adams, Gerald; Loehr, John – American Biology Teacher, 2001
Demonstrates the use of geological concepts and principles as an effective approach to teaching evolution and in turn the nature of science and the scientific method in the classroom. This approach to teaching makes it easier for students to understand the basic concepts of evolution which is really important in order to understand nature as it…
Descriptors: Evolution, Geology, Higher Education, Scientific Methodology
Mills, Anthony – Australian Science Teachers' Journal, 2000
A new generation of students view technology as fundamental and anticipates its use in science education as a matter of course. New curriculum documents direct teachers to incorporate the use of technology in their classrooms and develop original electronic resources beyond those readily accessible. Uses the macro programming facilities in a…
Descriptors: Educational Change, Educational Technology, Elementary Secondary Education, Futures (of Society)
Walker, Jearl – Scientific American, 1985
Discusses forces that shape the behavior of water as a drop meanders down a windowpane. A homemade apparatus for studying meanders is described along with several experiments. Contact angles, molecule attraction, surface area, air tension, and gravity drag forces are some of the topics addressed. (DH)
Descriptors: College Science, Fluid Mechanics, Higher Education, Motion
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Carson, Robert N. – Science and Education, 2002
Describes a proposed middle school curriculum designed to coordinate the major subject areas around a single coherent story line and tell the epic tale of the development of formal intellectual culture from its distant origins to the present day. Ourstory explores the history of scientific culture from the perspective of foundational disciplines…
Descriptors: Integrated Curriculum, Middle Schools, Science History, Science Instruction
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Wellington, Jerry – Canadian Journal of Science, Mathematics and Technology Education, 2001
Attempts to make explicit the recurrent tensions in debates about the purpose of science education and considers past frameworks for the aims of science education, arguing that no one element of the range of goals of science education should be over-emphasized at the expense of others. (Author/MM)
Descriptors: Educational Change, Elementary Secondary Education, Science Curriculum, Science Education History
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James, C. – Physics Education, 1988
Discusses the use of logarithm and reciprocal graphs in the college physics classroom. Provides examples, such as electrical conductivity, reliability function in the Weibull model, and the Clausius-Clapeyron equation for latent heat of vaporation. Shows graphs with weighting of points. (YP)
Descriptors: College Science, Graphs, Higher Education, Physics
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Eliason, John C., Jr. – Physics Teacher, 1989
Discusses a laboratory exercise simulating the paths of light rays through spherical water drops by applying principles of ray optics and geometry. Describes four parts: determining the output angles, computer simulation, explorations, model testing, and solutions. Provides a computer program and some diagrams. (YP)
Descriptors: Computer Simulation, Laboratory Experiments, Laboratory Procedures, Optics
Burke, James; And Others – 1985
The impact of science on society is examined in this publication's coverage of a series of public lectures that commemorated the 25th anniversary of the National Aeronautics and Space Administration. Edited versions of four speeches are presented which address the impact of science on society from the time of humanity's first significant…
Descriptors: Change, Computers, Futures (of Society), Inventions
Staples, Betsy – Creative Computing, 1983
Herbert Simon (Nobel prize-winning economist/professor) expresses his views on human and artificial intelligence, problem solving, inventing concepts, and the future. Includes comments on expert systems, state of the art in artificial intelligence, robotics, and "Bacon," a computer program that finds scientific laws hidden in raw data.…
Descriptors: Artificial Intelligence, Computer Oriented Programs, Computer Programs, Computer Science
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Matsumura, Molleen – Reports of the National Center for Science Education, 1998
Addresses the problem of school-sponsored assemblies featuring guest speakers who present creation science on school premises. A science teacher who spoke at a follow-up assembly established two goals: (1) to present authoritative information about evolution; and (2) to help students evaluate the creation speaker's arguments against evolution.…
Descriptors: Agenda Setting, Bias, Creationism, Earth Science
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Shulman, Bonnie Jean – Journal of Women and Minorities in Science and Engineering, 1994
Summarizes some feminist critiques of science which leads to an investigation of the role that language plays within science. Also explores the ramifications of gendered discourse for the teaching of science and mathematics. Contains 40 references. (Author/PVD)
Descriptors: Classroom Communication, Discourse Analysis, Epistemology, Feminism
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Segal, Gilda – Research in Science Education, 1997
Contrasts naive beliefs about the nature of science with science as it appears from sociological and philosophical study, feminist critique, and insights from multicultural education. Pragmatic school science is situated within a framework that questions how we know and the recognition that even high-status knowledge can be challenged. (AIM)
Descriptors: Educational Change, Higher Education, Learning Processes, Questioning Techniques
Barton, Angela Calabrese – 1998
This volume presents a case for science education from a feminist perspective. Feminist science teaching is concerned with questions that emerge from the intersections of the pedagogical, the disciplinary, and the personal with the political, social, and historical dimensions of each of these. It is also concerned with how knowledge of the ways in…
Descriptors: Consciousness Raising, Educational Philosophy, Elitism, Epistemology