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Peter Renshaw; Kirsty Jackson; Ron Tooth – Australian Journal of Environmental Education, 2024
In this article, we adopt assemblage as "methodology" and as a way to foreground the vitality and relational agency of other species as they encounter humans. Research as assemblage is a process of becoming with others, and we experienced that ontological process during three environmental excursions as we became entangled in…
Descriptors: Animals, Environmental Education, Sensory Experience, Teaching Methods
Rachel Stein; Karla Eitel; Janet Rachlow – Journal of College Science Teaching, 2025
Lidar remote sensing, which uses laser pulses to measure three-dimensional structure, has become essential across natural science disciplines. However, undergraduate students typically receive limited, if any, exposure to this technology and rarely have opportunities to experience it. Experiential and multi-modal courses may be ideal for…
Descriptors: Lasers, Measurement Equipment, Undergraduate Students, College Science
Chenxin Tu – Teaching Science, 2023
In this article, we share the inspiring story of 9-year-old Tallulah, who is passionate about creating homes for wildlife. We include information to help you and your students carry out a biodiversity audit. As an extension activity, students can implement a plan to improve the habitat for wildlife in their area. While students will be learning…
Descriptors: Science Instruction, Wildlife, Ecology, Biodiversity
Nicol, Cynthia; Thom, Jennifer S.; Doolittle, Edward; Glanfield, Florence; Ghostkeeper, Elmer – ZDM: Mathematics Education, 2023
Positioned within Indigenous and ecological discourses, our paper reconsiders human-centered relationships with earth and activities such as STEM that view earth as commodity, resource, and platform. In doing so, we turn to the ways earth (e.g., rivers, forests, animals) teaches mathematics education for "STEM as place" and reveals…
Descriptors: Mathematics Education, Natural Resources, STEM Education, Wildlife
Hilary Whitehouse – Australian Journal of Environmental Education, 2024
In the state of Queensland, volunteers perform much of the work needed to prevent the extinction of threatened species who are native and unique to this continent. Acting from an understanding of interspecies justice, caring people rescue and rehabilitate hundreds of thousands of wild animals every year. Many of these same people conduct informal…
Descriptors: Environmental Education, Wildlife, Informal Education, Networks
Dang Vu, Hoai Nam – International Journal of Social Research Methodology, 2022
Obtaining insights on the illicit consumption of endangered wildlife products is challenging, especially when the study objects are the super-rich. This research note draws upon my experience interviewing nearly 1,000 rhino horn consumers in Vietnam. Trust is crucial in such interactions. No interviews could have been conducted without good…
Descriptors: Wildlife, Crime, Foreign Countries, Interviews
Taylor, Affrica – Discourse: Studies in the Cultural Politics of Education, 2020
The naming of the Anthropocene (or epoch of Man) portends precarious futures for twenty-first century children. In deciding how best to respond, feminist scholars warn against perpetuating the heroicism and grandiosity of Man-to-the-rescue scripts. Instead they suggest paying close attention to what is already going on in the world beyond the…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Feminism, Wildlife, Children
Joshua W. Reid; Michael L. Rutledge – Bioscene: Journal of College Biology Teaching, 2022
We developed and field-tested an active learning exercise designed to provide biology students with the opportunity to consider key aspects of the nature of science as a method of inquiry, particularly the roles of observation and inference in the development of scientific explanations and how scientists deal with uncertainty. In the activity…
Descriptors: Active Learning, Biology, Science Instruction, Scientific Principles
Tyler, Paul – Primary Science, 2020
In this article, the author considers ecosystems in a much more holistic way and encourages children to consider how all the interactions within that ecosystem affect the balance of it. There is hardly an ecosystem on Earth that has not been somehow affected by human interaction. Humans are the ultimate ecosystem engineers, and it is important to…
Descriptors: Science Instruction, Ecology, Conservation (Environment), Natural Resources
Nunes, Rhewter; de Bem Oliveira, Ivone; de Araújo Dias, Priscila; Bidinotto, Alexandre Borges; de Campos Telles, Mariana Pires – Biochemistry and Molecular Biology Education, 2021
In this paper, we propose and describe a new approach, named BarcodingGO, to teach environmental DNA and bioinformatics concepts to undergraduate or graduate students in molecular biology-related fields. The learning pipeline proposed here aims to solve a simulated environmental monitoring problem, in which a biodiversity survey of a particular…
Descriptors: Science Instruction, College Science, College Students, Molecular Biology
Thomas, Jeremy P.; Allen, Tanesha M.; Irving, Holly; Baker, Roger; Mitchell, Liza; Forder, Clare; Philipps, Olivia – School Science Review, 2021
Schools in Abingdon, Oxfordshire, funded by a Royal Society Partnership Grant, engaged in an animal behaviour project with a researcher at the University of Oxford's Wildlife Conservation Research Unit. The pupils used camera traps to conduct wildlife surveys and investigate behavioural responses in European badgers ("Meles meles"). The…
Descriptors: Science Instruction, Animals, Wildlife, Behavior
Hooven, Jenn; Kissling, Mark; Woods, Misty – Social Studies and the Young Learner, 2021
Jenn Hooven, Mark Kissling, and Misty Woods show how children between the ages of 3 and 5 learn to be ecological citizens at the Child Care Center at Hort Woods on Penn State's University Park campus. The authors demonstrate how the curriculum provides a learning focus on animals, insects, plants, weather, and nature-at-large and includes both…
Descriptors: Preschool Education, Ecology, Environmental Education, Natural Resources
Diedrichs, Danilo R. – PRIMUS, 2019
Harvesting models based on ordinary differential equations are commonly used in the fishery industry and wildlife management to model the evolution of a population depleted by harvest mortality. We present a project consisting of a series of scenarios based on fishery harvesting models to teach the application of theoretical concepts learned in a…
Descriptors: Mathematical Models, Equations (Mathematics), Calculus, Industry
Scott, Catherine – Science and Children, 2020
Growing up in a small coastal town, students spend a great deal of time outdoors and at the beach. Given the many learning opportunities that such an environment can provide, engaging students in a sustained, environmental service project seemed like a natural complement to lessons focusing on the interaction of organisms within a habitat. This…
Descriptors: Grade 5, Elementary School Students, Elementary School Science, Environmental Education
Odom, Arthur – Science Teacher, 2022
This article provides two activities, exploring genetic drift of small breeding populations, highlighting the black-footed ferret ("Mustela nigripes"). According to the U.S. Fish and Wildlife service, all black-footed ferrets are descended from 18 individuals, making them extremely vulnerable to genetic drift. They were thought to be…
Descriptors: Genetics, Mathematical Models, Biodiversity, Evolution