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Peer reviewedLundberg, Doug – American Biology Teacher, 1993
Describes using a local college for the teaching of the recommended Advance Placement laboratories as a way to increase greatly needed course time and to increase the amount of equipment available. (PR)
Descriptors: Advanced Placement Programs, Biology, College Science, High Schools
Peer reviewedShimabukuro, Mary A.; Fearing, Vickie – Science and Children, 1993
Garlic is an ideal plant for the elementary classroom. It grows rapidly in water without aeration for several weeks and remains relatively free of microbial contamination. Simple experiments with garlic purchased at grocery stores can illustrate various aspects of plant growth. (PR)
Descriptors: Elementary Education, Elementary School Science, Laboratory Procedures, Learning Activities
Peer reviewedArmour, Shaun; Fall, Ray – Science Teacher, 1992
Biotechnology has arrived in the supermarket in the form of genetically engineered enzymes. Presents an activity in which students explore the presence of protease enzymes in laundry detergents. (MDH)
Descriptors: Biological Sciences, Biotechnology, Enzymes, Science Activities
Peer reviewedCvancara, Victor – American Biology Teacher, 1992
Presents a laboratory experiment designed to help students understand the concept of diastolic blood pressure, the pressure during which the left ventricle of the heart is not contracting. Examines the effect of strenuous exercise on blood pressure. Includes materials needed, procedures, results, and discussion of the results. (MDH)
Descriptors: Biology, Blood Circulation, Cardiovascular System, College Science
Peer reviewedLea, Suzanne M. – Journal of College Science Teaching, 1993
Describes the "Physics by Inquiry" course that is designed to address student misconceptions. Explains how the course was taught at the University of North Carolina at Greensboro for teachers and how it was taught at Ohio State University for elementary-education majors. Concludes the course is exportable to many different environments…
Descriptors: College Science, Earth Science, Experiential Learning, Higher Education
Peer reviewedHausfather, Samuel J. – Science and Children, 1992
Conceptual change teaching is an instructional method that helps students modify, extend, or exchange their alternative conceptions for the appropriate scientific conceptions. Provides activities and a diagnostic test to apply the method to the concepts of heat and temperature. (MDH)
Descriptors: Cognitive Development, Cognitive Measurement, Concept Formation, Diagnostic Tests
Peer reviewedMuller, Rainer – Physics Teacher, 2000
Explains how students can perform a refutation of the ether theory using information from the Global Positioning System (GPS). Discusses the functioning of the GPS, qualitatively describes how position determination would be affected by an ether wind, and illustrates the pertinent ideas with a simple quantitative model. (WRM)
Descriptors: High Schools, Higher Education, Mathematical Models, Physics
Golick, Douglas A.; Ellis, Marion D.; Beecham, Brady – American Biology Teacher, 2006
Bumble bees are valuable pollinators of native and cultivated flora. Despite our knowledge of bumble bee nest site selection, most efforts to attract bumble bees to artificial domiciles have been met with limited success. Creating and evaluating artificial domiciles provides students an opportunity to investigate a real problem. In this lesson,…
Descriptors: Science Instruction, Entomology, Teaching Methods, Science Projects
Rivkin, Mary – Early Childhood Today, 2005
This article discusses how children can build teamwork through science activities. Through science experiences, the excitement can generate a sense of shared community in class. Science experiments help develop children's learning. Science experiences are a prime source of powerful new words because they use a common language to describe the…
Descriptors: Teamwork, Science Experiments, Early Childhood Education, Science Education
Nokes, Timothy J.; Ohlsson, Stellan – Cognitive Science, 2005
Contemporary theories of learning postulate one or at most a small number of different learning mechanisms. However, people are capable of mastering a given task through qualitatively different learning paths such as learning by instruction and learning by doing. We hypothesize that the knowledge acquired through such alternative paths differs…
Descriptors: Mastery Learning, Learning Theories, Laboratory Experiments, Learning Processes
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
Robutti, Ornella – International Journal for Technology in Mathematics Education, 2006
This report is part of a long-term research on the construction of mathematical meanings through the interaction with various technologies. The research involved a set of teaching experiments based on body motion with sensors and calculators at different school levels, from kindergarten to secondary school. Here I refer to the one developed in a…
Descriptors: Motion, Grade 8, Mathematical Concepts, Information Technology
Kafoussi, Sonia – Statistics Education Research Journal, 2004
This paper describes a classroom teaching experiment, concerning the concept of probability, with children aged 5 in a kindergarten school. The teaching experiment was based on constructivist and interactionist theories about the learning of school mathematics and lasted one month. The collection of the information was based on the tape-recorded…
Descriptors: Probability, Kindergarten, Constructivism (Learning), Young Children
Kaspar, Roger L. – Biochemistry and Molecular Biology Education, 2002
A main challenge in educating undergraduate students is to introduce them to the Internet and to teach them how to effectively use it in research. To this end, an Internet assignment was developed that introduces students to websites related to biomedical research at the beginning of a biochemistry/molecular biology laboratory course. The basic…
Descriptors: Undergraduate Students, Science Laboratories, Biochemistry, Molecular Biology
Aegerter-Wilmsen, Tinri; Hartog, Rob; Bisseling, Ton – Journal of Interactive Learning Research, 2003
An important learning goal of a molecular biology curriculum is the attainment of a certain competence level in experimental design. Currently, undergraduate students are confronted with experimental approaches in textbooks, lectures and laboratory courses. However, most students do not reach a satisfactory level of competence in the designing of…
Descriptors: Undergraduate Students, Science Process Skills, Molecular Biology, Internet

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