Publication Date
In 2025 | 1 |
Since 2024 | 1 |
Since 2021 (last 5 years) | 2 |
Since 2016 (last 10 years) | 9 |
Since 2006 (last 20 years) | 28 |
Descriptor
Intervals | 31 |
Teaching Methods | 31 |
Mathematics Instruction | 8 |
Statistics | 8 |
Physics | 6 |
Science Instruction | 5 |
Computer Software | 4 |
Mathematical Logic | 4 |
Probability | 4 |
Sampling | 4 |
Simulation | 4 |
More ▼ |
Source
Author
Publication Type
Reports - Descriptive | 31 |
Journal Articles | 29 |
Guides - Classroom - Teacher | 2 |
Education Level
Higher Education | 5 |
Postsecondary Education | 3 |
High Schools | 2 |
Elementary Education | 1 |
Grade 5 | 1 |
Audience
Teachers | 7 |
Location
California (Fresno) | 1 |
Michigan | 1 |
Nebraska | 1 |
Laws, Policies, & Programs
Assessments and Surveys
What Works Clearinghouse Rating
Chen, Lin-An; Kao, Chu-Lan Michael – International Journal of Mathematical Education in Science and Technology, 2022
The uniformly most accurate (UMA) is an important optimal approach in interval estimation, but the current literature often introduces it in a confusing way, rendering the learning, teaching and researching of UMA problematic. Two major aspects cause this confusion. First, UMA is often interpreted to maximize the accuracy of coverage, but in fact,…
Descriptors: Accuracy, Mathematics Instruction, Learning Processes, Probability
Fred Spooner; Robert Pennington; Ashley Anderson; Thai Ray Williams – TEACHING Exceptional Children, 2025
Time delay is one of the most established practices for teaching both functional and academic skills to students with extensive support needs (ESN). Students with ESN have intellectual or developmental disabilities and, in some cases, other support needs (e.g., physical disabilities, sensory impairments) and require comprehensive instructional and…
Descriptors: Intervals, Time Factors (Learning), Teaching Methods, Special Needs Students
Caudle, Kyle A. – Teaching Statistics: An International Journal for Teachers, 2018
When playing card games, how many times should a deck be shuffled in order to achieve randomness? This article shows how card shuffling can be used as a classroom exercise to reinforce construction and interpretation of confidence intervals.
Descriptors: Games, Statistics, Intervals, Teaching Methods
Walkup, John R.; Key, Roger A.; Talbot, Patrick R. M. – Physics Education, 2019
A lab activity for teaching physics students the fundamentals of statistical analysis during the first few weeks of instruction is described. This activity involves students timing a pulse of light generated by an Arduino device of fixed duration with individual timers (e.g. stopwatch, iPhone timer). To select the most precise timing methods and…
Descriptors: Physics, Introductory Courses, Science Instruction, Laboratory Experiments
Cantarero, Rodrigo; de Guzman, Maria Rosario T.; Taylor, Sarah; Hong, Soo-Hong; Choi, Jeong-Kyun – Journal of Extension, 2019
Extension professionals are increasingly using geographic information system (GIS) technology to develop and inform programs and services. In this article, we use a mapping exercise to demonstrate how the unit of data can be applied and inadvertently misrepresented in GIS mapping. We contrast the use of counts, percentages, and location quotients…
Descriptors: Geographic Information Systems, Maps, Teaching Methods, Extension Agents
Silva, José Luis Ángel Rodríguez; Aguilar, Mario Sánchez – Teaching Statistics: An International Journal for Teachers, 2016
We present a proposal for helping students to cope with statistical word problems related to the classification of different cases of confidence intervals. The proposal promotes an environment where students can explicitly discuss the reasons underlying their classification of cases.
Descriptors: Statistics, Teaching Methods, Word Problems (Mathematics), Intervals
Lincoln, James – Physics Teacher, 2018
I am writing this article to raise awareness of burst mode photography as a fun and engaging way for teachers and students to experience physics demonstration activities. In the context of digital photography, "burst mode" means taking multiple photographs per second, and this is a feature that now comes standard on most digital…
Descriptors: Physics, Demonstrations (Educational), Science Instruction, Photography
LoPresto, Michael C. – Physics Education, 2016
Throughout a general education course on sound and light aimed at music and art students, analogies between subjective perceptions of objective properties of sound and light waves are a recurring theme. Demonstrating that the pitch and loudness of musical sounds are related to the frequency and intensity of a sound wave is simple and students are…
Descriptors: Light, Acoustics, Demonstrations (Educational), Music Activities
Quinn, Anne – Mathematics Teacher, 2016
While looking for an inexpensive technology package to help students in statistics classes, the author found StatKey, a free Web-based app. Not only is StatKey useful for students' year-end projects, but it is also valuable for helping students learn fundamental content such as the central limit theorem. Using StatKey, students can engage in…
Descriptors: Statistics, Computer Oriented Programs, Technology Uses in Education, Teaching Methods
Grant, Ken – Australian Senior Mathematics Journal, 2015
In 1859, on the occasion of being elected as a corresponding member of the Berlin Academy, Bernard Riemann (1826-66), a student of Carl Friedrich Gauss (1777-1855), presenteda lecture in which he presented a mathematics formula, derived from complex integration, which gave a precise count of the primes on the understanding that one of the terms in…
Descriptors: Mathematical Formulas, Mathematics, Numbers, Equations (Mathematics)
LoPresto, Michael C. – Physics Education, 2013
What follows is a description of a demonstration of superposition of waves and Fourier analysis using a set of four tuning forks mounted on resonance boxes and oscilloscope software to create, capture and analyze the waveforms and Fourier spectra of musical intervals.
Descriptors: Science Instruction, Teaching Methods, Acoustics, Music
Arzumanyan, George; Halcoussis, Dennis; Phillips, G. Michael – American Journal of Business Education, 2015
This paper presents the Agresti & Coull "Adjusted Wald" method for computing confidence intervals and margins of error for common proportion estimates. The presented method is easily implementable by business students and practitioners and provides more accurate estimates of proportions particularly in extreme samples and small…
Descriptors: Business Administration Education, Error of Measurement, Error Patterns, Intervals
Walsh, Jackie Acree; Sattes, Beth Dankert – Educational Leadership, 2015
The authors have seen an inspiring phenomenon in certain classrooms--students thinking through their answers to teacher questions, responding thoughtfully to other students' answers, even self-correcting or providing more information after they've answered a teacher aloud. The strategy behind these student actions is a skillful use of "wait…
Descriptors: Classroom Techniques, Discussion (Teaching Technique), Thinking Skills, Student Participation
Wadhwa, Ajay – Physics Education, 2012
Some balls which are made of high-quality rubber (an elastomeric) material, such as tennis or squash balls, could be used for the determination of an important property of such materials called resilience. Since a bouncing ball involves a single impact we call this property "rebound resilience" and express it as the ratio of the rebound height to…
Descriptors: Racquet Sports, Intervals, Time, Science Education
Thomsen, Kathy M. – Music Educators Journal, 2011
Dalcroze solfege engages the ear and the mind in chords, functional harmony, and key relationships, in addition to scales, intervals, and melodies. This article provides an overview of Dalcroze solfege by describing its methodology and by offering sample exercises for beginners as well as advanced students. (Contains 15 figures and 5 notes.)
Descriptors: Intervals, Teaching Methods, Human Body, Music