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Showing 1 to 15 of 50 results Save | Export
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Rebecca Higgins; Breen Riley; Jennell Talley; Alessandra Barrera; Jennifer Hurst-Kennedy; Shoshana Katzman – American Biology Teacher, 2023
To reduce the cost of educational materials needed by students, we generated a no-cost open educational resources (OER) textbook for an undergraduate level cell biology course. Cell biology is part of the curriculum in various undergraduate degrees for science, technology, engineering, and math majors, therefore generation of OER targets a large…
Descriptors: Science Instruction, Open Educational Resources, Textbooks, College Science
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Wright, L. Kate; Dy, Grace Elizabeth C.; Newman, Dina L. – American Biology Teacher, 2020
The process of meiosis is an essential topic that secondary and postsecondary students struggle with. The important meiosis-related concepts of homology, ploidy, and segregation can be described using the DNA Triangle framework, which connects them to the multidimensional nature of DNA (chromosomal, molecular, and informational levels). We have…
Descriptors: Undergraduate Students, Scientific Concepts, Textbooks, Biology
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Hicks, Melissa A.; Cline, Rebecca J.; Trepanier, Angela M. – American Biology Teacher, 2014
An understanding of how genomics information, including information about risk for common, multifactorial disease, can be used to promote personal health (personalized medicine) is becoming increasingly important for the American public. We undertook a quantitative content analysis of commonly used high school textbooks to assess how frequently…
Descriptors: Molecular Biology, Genetics, Science Instruction, Textbooks
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Quinlan, Catherine L. – American Biology Teacher, 2020
This article explores the need to include the science capital and cultural capital of African Americans in science teaching and offers practical exemplars for inclusion in the K-12 science curriculum. The author discusses ideas in the evolution of culture that contribute to the science content and perspectives of current textbooks and their…
Descriptors: Kindergarten, Elementary Secondary Education, Scientists, Science Instruction
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Senter, Phil – American Biology Teacher, 2013
Biology textbooks tend to assert the correctness of evolutionary concepts but mention very little of the evidence that supports them. This gives the impression that evolutionary theory is poorly supported, which discourages acceptance of the theory. A case in point is the age of the Earth. Biology textbooks usually mention that the planet is…
Descriptors: Evolution, Biology, Textbooks, Earth Science
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Stansfield, William D. – American Biology Teacher, 2012
The nature of scientific research sometimes involves a trial-and-error procedure. Popular reviews of successful results from this approach often sanitize the story by omitting unsuccessful trials, thus painting the rosy impression that research simply follows a direct route from hypothesis to experiment to scientific discovery. The discovery of…
Descriptors: Physiology, Scientific Research, Scientific Methodology, Textbooks
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Halverson, Kristy L. – American Biology Teacher, 2010
Phylogenetic trees, such as the "Tree of Life," are commonly found in biology textbooks and are often used in teaching. Because students often struggle to understand these diagrams, I developed a simple, inexpensive classroom model. Made of pipe cleaners, it is easily manipulated to rotate branches, compare topologies, map complete lineages,…
Descriptors: Evolution, Textbooks, Biology, Classification
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Allen, Joseph H.; Wold, Jill – American Biology Teacher, 2009
Evolution is commonly taught as a slow process that changes gene frequencies over long time periods. These genotypes are changed through natural selection on phenotypes with the fittest individuals spreading more genes into the environment than less-fit phenotypes. What is now well known to science, but still under-emphasized in textbooks and…
Descriptors: Evolution, Research Design, Textbooks, Genetics
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White, Brian T. – American Biology Teacher, 2009
An awareness of the extensive diversity of living organisms is an essential component of a complete biology education. It is important for students to explore the spectacular variety of living things as well as to understand the many solutions to the challenges of living on Earth that have evolved in different organisms. The "National Science…
Descriptors: Textbooks, Biology, Science Laboratories, Undergraduate Study
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Weinberg, Stanley L. – American Biology Teacher, 1978
Two books are reviewed which discuss conservative critics of textbooks, especially critics of the presentation of evolution in biology textbooks. The article tells who these textbook watchers are and describes their aversions and preferences. (BB)
Descriptors: Biological Sciences, Biology, Evolution, Politics
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Case, Emily – American Biology Teacher, 2008
Taxonomy, the identification, naming, and classification of living things, is an indispensable unit in any biology curriculum and indeed, an integral part of biological science. Taxonomy catalogues life's diversity and is an essential tool for communication. Textbook discussions of taxonomy range anywhere from three to eight domains of kingdoms.…
Descriptors: Textbooks, Biology, Classification, High Schools
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Stansfield, William D. – American Biology Teacher, 2008
Gregor Mendel (1822-1884) is rightly credited as being the "father of modern genetics." He presented the results of his pea experiments at a meeting of his local natural history society in two lectures during 1865. His paper was published in the proceedings of the society the next year. From his breeding experiments with the edible pea, he…
Descriptors: Genetics, Teaching Methods, Science Instruction, Biology
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Storey, Richard D. – American Biology Teacher, 1989
Glaring and basic textbook errors and misconceptions about photosynthesis are discussed. The Calvin Cycle, photosynthetic products, alternative cycles, and plants as producers are considered. Included are observations of both college and secondary textbooks. (CW)
Descriptors: Biological Sciences, Cognitive Structures, College Science, Misconceptions
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Stansfield, William D. – American Biology Teacher, 2006
A history of the search for the structure of DNA, as revealed in the evolution of biochemistry and genetics textbooks, reveals that they are unacceptably tardy in presenting the current (or even the recent) state of knowledge. This problem places an extra burden on biology teachers to supplement these texts.
Descriptors: Textbooks, Biochemistry, Biology, Genetics
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Summers, Gerald; Decker, Todd; Barrow, Lloyd – American Biology Teacher, 2007
In spite of the importance of geological time in evolutionary biology, misconceptions about historical events in the history of life on Earth are common. Glenn (1990) has documented a decline from 1960 to 1989 in the amount of space devoted to the history of life in high school earth science textbooks, but we are aware of no similar study in…
Descriptors: High Schools, Biology, Textbooks, Misconceptions
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