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Irzik, Gürol; Nola, Robert – Science & Education, 2023
The family resemblance approach to nature of science is receiving increasing attention by science educators since its inception about a decade ago. Many scholars of science education have contributed and continue to contribute to it not only theoretically but also by applying it empirically to a wide range of areas such as curriculum and textbook…
Descriptors: Scientific Principles, Science Education, Scientific Concepts, Observation
Matheus Fernandes Filgueiras; Endler Marcel Borges – Journal of Chemical Education, 2022
Students determine the iron mass in dietary supplements using four colorimetric assays. These colorimetric assays were selective for Fe[superscript 3+]. It was complexed by thiocyanide, salicylate, gallic acid, and Fe(CN)[subscript 6][superscript 4-], forming blood-red, red, violet, and blue complexes, respectively. The [lambda][subscript max] of…
Descriptors: Chemistry, Dietetics, Science Education, Science Experiments
Michael A. Rother – International Journal of Mathematical Education in Science and Technology, 2024
A straightforward experimental set-up, requiring a two-liter bottle, a ruler and a stopwatch, is used to provide data appropriate for modelling with Torricelli's Law in the simplest case, and a more sophisticated differential equation when losses are taken into account and a pipe extension is considered. With only an exit hole included in the…
Descriptors: Science Experiments, Science Education, Scientific Principles, Equations (Mathematics)
Gow, Ellen; Kruse, Jerrid; Wees, Susan; Dee, Kristy; Hernandez, Leslie – Science and Children, 2023
As an introduction to sound and vibration, the authors wanted their first-grade students to plan and conduct their own investigations. In this article, the authors share a series of investigations to help students explore the relationship between sound and vibration. By planning, creating, testing, adapting, and reflecting on the outcomes of the…
Descriptors: Science Education, Acoustics, Grade 1, Elementary School Students
Ekkens, Tom – Physics Teacher, 2022
In many introductory physics classes, diffraction of light is introduced first, then more advanced diffraction topics such as x-ray diffraction, Bragg's law, and crystallography are covered. Since using x-rays raises safety concerns and atomic spacing in a crystal is not easy to change, microwaves with macroscopic crystals have been used to study…
Descriptors: Data Collection, Physics, Science Education, Introductory Courses
Temel Aslan, Safiye – Journal of Inquiry Based Activities, 2022
This study aims to draw attention to data literacy, which is considered an important skill of the 21st century, and to provide an example activity that would incorporate it into chemistry education. The activity was designed using real data of Robert Boyle's experiment. The activity aims to examine Boyle's data in such a way to support data…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Data, Information Literacy, Chemistry
Leone, M.; Robotti, N.; Verna, G. – Physics Education, 2018
The so-called "Rutherford's experiment," as it is outlined in many physics textbooks, is a case in point of the flaws around the history at the educational level of one of the decisive event of modern physics: the discovery that the atom has a nucleus. This paper shows that this alleged experiment is a very approximate and very partial…
Descriptors: Science Experiments, Textbooks, Scientific Principles, Models
Gutierez, Sally Baricaua; Song, Jinwoong; Kim, Heui-Baik – Educational Philosophy and Theory, 2019
This paper discusses the emergence of science education in the seventeenth century with the influences of Joseph Priestley on the Dissenting Academies. Primarily, this paper analyses Priestley's ideas from some of his letters to scientists during his time and his ideas from his books "Miscellaneous Observations Relating to Education"…
Descriptors: Science History, Science Education, Scientists, Science Education History
Reeder, S.; Wilkie, K.; Kelly, T. J.; Boullard, J. S. – Physics Education, 2019
In this article, we outline a demonstration that is relatively simple to perform but whose results require a quite subtle interpretation of Faraday's Law. When a very small magnet is dropped through a coil it can tumble as it falls leading to 'spikes' in the measured emf signal. The experiment, and demonstration, can be used in an introductory…
Descriptors: Physics, Magnets, Science Experiments, Scientific Concepts
Lee, Jiwon – International Journal of Science Education, 2021
High school students need more comprehensive scientific inquiry learning instruction through research ethics education. Yet, this topic is often overlooked in the science curriculum. To collect basic data to guide research ethics education for high school students, this study documents the kinds of research misconduct students commit, the contexts…
Descriptors: High School Students, Secondary School Science, Science Education, Ethics
Aguilar, Horacio Munguía; Maldonado, Rigoberto Franco; Navarro, Luis Barba – Physics Education, 2017
Charging a capacitor with a photovoltaic module is an experiment which reveals a lot about the modules characteristics. It is customary to represent these characteristics with an equivalent circuit whose elements represent its physical parameters. The behavior of a photovoltaic module is very similar to that of a single cell but the electric…
Descriptors: Electromechanical Technology, Power Technology, Energy, Science Education
Shuler, Robert L., Jr. – Physics Education, 2015
A simple mathematical formulation of Mach's principle is given based on a century of investigation into inertia, and used to check the results of Newton's famous bucket experiment.
Descriptors: Science Education, Investigations, Mathematical Formulas, Science Experiments
Reif, Marc – Physics Teacher, 2014
I came up with a new way to introduce the concept of a constant gravitational field near the surface of the Earth. I made "g-field detectors" (see Fig. 1 ) and suspended them by strings from the ceiling in a regular spacing. The detectors are cardstock arrows with a hole punched out of them and the letter "g" in the center.
Descriptors: Physics, Scientific Concepts, Scientific Principles, Science Education
Cross, R. – Physics Education, 2015
Experiments are described on collisions between two billiard balls and between a bat and a ball. The experiments are designed to extend a student's understanding of collision events and could be used either as a classroom demonstration or for a student project.
Descriptors: Science Education, Demonstrations (Educational), Student Projects, Science Experiments
Logiurato, Fabrizio – Physics Teacher, 2014
The ripple tank is one of the physics education devices most appreciated by teachers and students. It allows one to visualize various phenomena related to wave physics in an effective and enthralling way. Usually this apparatus consists of a tank with a transparent bottom that is filled with a thin layer of water. A source of light illuminates the…
Descriptors: Physics, Science Experiments, Science Equipment, Scientific Concepts