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Showing 1 to 15 of 18 results Save | Export
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Quang, Ngo Khoa – Physics Teacher, 2022
This article describes a simple way to introduce nanomaterials using the presence of carbon nanodots (CNDs) in widely available food. Budweiser® beer and Coca-Cola®, commercial foods that are commonly accessible, were utilized to demonstrate the optical property of nanoparticles. Specifically, green and violet laser pointers were employed for the…
Descriptors: Science Instruction, Food, Scientific Concepts, Teaching Methods
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Birriel, Jennifer; Birriel, Ignacio – Physics Teacher, 2014
Glow sticks are a popular Halloween staple familiar to most of our students. The production of light via a chemical reaction is called "chemiluminescence," and glow sticks are often used as demonstrations and experiments in the chemistry classroom to study reaction rates as a function of temperature. A black light can be used to…
Descriptors: Science Instruction, Light, Chemistry, Science Experiments
Vu D. Nguyen; Kurt R. Birdwhistell – Journal of Chemical Education, 2014
An update to the thermochromic cobalt(II) chloride equilibrium demonstration is described. Filter paper that has been saturated with aqueous cobalt(II) chloride is heated for seconds in a microwave oven, producing a color change. The resulting pink and blue map is used to colorfully demonstrate Le Châtelier's principle and to illuminate the hot…
Descriptors: Science Instruction, Chemistry, Color, Thermodynamics
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Theilmann, Florian; Grusche, Sascha – Physics Education, 2013
Teaching prismatic colours usually boils down to establishing the take-home message that white light consists of "differently refrangible" coloured rays. This approach explains the classical spectrum of seven colours but has its limitations, e.g. in discussing spectra from setups with higher resolution or in understanding the well…
Descriptors: Science Instruction, Physics, Color, Scientific Principles
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Blattner, Margaret; Hug, Barbara; Ogrodnik, Jon; Korol, Donna – Science Teacher, 2013
Generating, collecting, and analyzing data is an essential practice in the science classroom (NRC 2012). Taking this data and using it to craft an explanation that demonstrates understanding of content is another essential practice. But both practices can be challenging, and students often require teacher support to succeed. Accordingly, the…
Descriptors: Science Instruction, Teaching Methods, Secondary School Science, High Schools
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Host, Gunnar E.; Schonborn, Konrad J.; Palmerius, Karljohan E. Lundin – Journal of Chemical Education, 2012
Visualizing molecular properties is often crucial for constructing conceptual understanding in chemistry. However, research has revealed numerous challenges surrounding students' meaningful interpretation of the relationship between the geometry and electrostatic properties of molecules. This study explored students' (n = 18) use of three visual…
Descriptors: Chemistry, Secondary School Science, High Schools, College Science
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Miller, Jon S.; Windelborn, Augden F. – Physics Education, 2013
The activities described here allow students to explore the concept of diffusion with the use of common equipment such as computers, webcams and analysis software. The procedure includes taking a series of digital pictures of a container of water with a webcam as a dye slowly diffuses. At known time points, measurements of the pixel densities…
Descriptors: Science Instruction, Scientific Concepts, Educational Technology, Physics
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Gran, Susan; McNamara, Michael – Science Scope, 2012
"Why do I need to know this if I don't want to be a scientist?" is a question middle school teachers probably hear on a regular basis. In an effort to answer it, the authors have tried to appeal to students' varied interests, and thus developed myriad ways to show students how science is a part of their everyday lives. What is described in this…
Descriptors: Theaters, Lighting, Teaching Methods, Middle School Teachers
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Bonner, J. Jose – Science Teacher, 2011
Students may wonder why they look the way they do. The answer lies in genetics, the branch of biology that deals with heredity and the variation of inherited traits. However, understanding how an organism's genetic code (i.e., genotype) affects its characteristics (i.e., phenotype) is more than a matter of idle curiosity: It's essential for…
Descriptors: Heredity, Genetics, Human Body, Biology
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Green, William P.; Trotochaud, Alan; Sherman, Julia; Kazerounian, Kazem; Faraclas, Elias W. – Journal of Chemical Education, 2009
The quantization of electronic energy levels in atoms is foundational to a mechanistic explanation of the periodicity of elemental properties and behavior. This paper presents a hands-on, guided inquiry approach to teaching this concept as part of a broader treatment of quantum mechanics, and as a foundation for an understanding of chemical…
Descriptors: Quantum Mechanics, Chemistry, Laboratory Experiments, Teaching Methods
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McCann, Florence; Pedersen, Jon; Falsarella, Carell; McCann, Patrick – Science Scope, 2008
This investigation was part of a multi-lesson unit that gave students direct experience using increasingly sophisticated tools to make more detailed observations and measurements of light. Through these lessons, students experienced a key aspect of the nature of science (McComas 2004), namely how scientists constantly refine and modify theories as…
Descriptors: Units of Study, Scientific Principles, Science Education, Observation
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Seddon, G. M.; Shubber, K. E. – Research in Science and Technological Education, 1984
Investigated use of overhead transparencies containing a sequence of diagrams to represent a three-dimensional structure at different stages during a rotation. Significant learning occurred among 120 Bahraini boys (aged 15-16) when the transparencies contained multi-colored diagrams which were exposed simultaneously or individually in a cumulative…
Descriptors: Color, Diagrams, Molecular Structure, Science Education
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School Science Review, 1984
Presents (1) suggestions on teaching volume and density in the elementary school; (2) ideas for teaching about floating and sinking; (3) a simple computer program on color addition; and (4) an illustration of Newton's second law of motion. (JN)
Descriptors: Color, Density (Matter), Elementary School Science, Elementary Secondary Education
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Katayama, Nobuyasu; Kanaizuka, Yasuhiro; Sudarmi, Rini; Yokohama, Yasutsugu – Journal of Biological Education, 2003
The method for extracting and separating hydrophobic photosynthetic pigments proposed by Katayama "et al." ("Japanese Journal of Phycology," 42, 71-77, 1994) has been improved to introduce it to student laboratories at the senior high school level. Silica gel powder was used for removing water from fresh materials prior to…
Descriptors: High Schools, Chemistry, Laboratories, Botany
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Roberg, Ezra – Science Teacher, 2004
The "Central Dogma" of genetics states that one gene, located in a DNA molecule, is ultimately translated into one protein. As important as this idea is, many teachers shy away from teaching the actual mechanism of gene translation, and many students find the concepts abstract and inaccessible. This article describes a unit, called Genetics…
Descriptors: Plastics, Genetics, Secondary School Science, High School Students
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