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Martin Cautivo Querevalú-Pazos – Education 3-13, 2025
Inquiry-based teaching is the most widespread approach in science education worldwide. However, in Peru, this model became better known since the latest curriculum reform in 2016, which proposed implementing that teaching approach at all levels of schooling. Since then, no literature review has been conducted on the status quo of implementing…
Descriptors: Inquiry, Active Learning, Science Instruction, Teaching Methods
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Irina Braun; Scott E. Lewis; Nicole Graulich – Chemistry Education Research and Practice, 2025
The ability to reason with representations is pivotal for successful learning in Organic Chemistry and is closely linked to representational competence. Given the visual nature of this discipline, this comprises competency in extracting and processing relevant visual information. With regard to the resonance concept, proficiency in identifying…
Descriptors: Undergraduate Students, Organic Chemistry, Science Instruction, Pattern Recognition
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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
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Antonio García-Carmona – Science & Education, 2025
For many years, hegemonic approaches to teaching the nature of science (NOS) have focused mainly on understanding some epistemic (i.e., rational, or cognitive) aspects involved in the construction of science. So, aspects of a non-epistemic (i.e., non-rational, contextual, or extra-scientific) nature have been practically neglected in these…
Descriptors: Science Instruction, Teaching Methods, Scientific Principles, Holistic Approach
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Yiting Lin; Yunqi Cai; Cheng Lian; Shouhong Xu; Wenqing Zhang; Honglai Liu – Journal of Chemical Education, 2025
Ion transport, involving the diffusion and migration of ions within the electrolyte, stands as a fundamental concept in electrochemistry and serves as the driving force for electrochemical reactions. Electric double layers are critical in the fields of electrochemical energy storage and chemical conversion, constituting a central focus of…
Descriptors: Chemistry, Science Instruction, Energy, Engineering
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Allan Feldman; Nadja Belova; Ingo Eilks; Marika Kapanadze; Franz Rauch; Rachel Mamlok-Naaman; Mehmet Fatih Tasar – Journal of Science Teacher Education, 2025
Action research (AR) has long been promoted as a way teachers can improve their practice and increase their understanding of their educational situations. In this article we examine the impact of AR on science teacher education through a critical review of the literature. We sought to identify the goals and purposes of the AR, its mode, and the…
Descriptors: Action Research, Science Teachers, Science Instruction, Periodicals
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Fuxing Wang; Xiaoxue Leng; Ziyi Kuang; Tingting Zhao – Journal of Computer Assisted Learning, 2025
Background: Both eye movement modelling examples (EMMEs) and cues guide attention and improve learning in multimedia learning environments. EMME can act as a special form of cue. However, no studies have directly examined whether EMME would be superior to visual cues. Objective: The study was to investigate whether there were advantages of EMME…
Descriptors: Eye Movements, Cues, Attention, Multimedia Instruction
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Caryn Babaian; Sudhir Kumar; Sayaka Miura – American Biology Teacher, 2025
Water is one of the most common molecules in the universe. Water is polarized, but it has many states besides the normal tetrahedron depicted in standard biology texts. Water is also the most ubiquitous molecule on Earth, the universal solvent. It is the internal and external habitat of cells. Ecologically, water is contiguous with life and the…
Descriptors: Biology, Evolution, Science Instruction, Water
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Jianqiang Ye; Yubin Zheng; Min Zhan; Yiling Zhou; Long Li; Dimei Chen – Research in Science Education, 2025
Organic chemistry is challenging for novices as it involves a large quantity of organic reactions. Effective learning requires not only profound theoretical knowledge but also the ability to reason about causal mechanisms. This study investigated pre-service chemistry teachers' mechanistic reasoning and the implicit cognitive process. Participants…
Descriptors: Organic Chemistry, Science Instruction, Preservice Teachers, Science Teachers
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Rogers, Ben – Primary Science, 2022
Forces and motion are at the heart of physics and children start learning from the moment they are able to interact with the world. Children as young as one year show surprise when a ball does not behave as expected. This is a tremendous bonus to learning physics, but it has hidden dangers: they only learn how things move on the Earth, where we…
Descriptors: Physics, Elementary School Science, Science Instruction, Playgrounds
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Ramos, Cristiana V.; Samelo, Jaime; Martins, Patri´cia A. T.; Moreno, Maria João – Journal of Chemical Education, 2022
The amount of protein in complex matrices such as food products is an important characteristic, at both a nutritional and a pedagogical level. There are several methods available for protein quantification, from simple UV absorption to mass spectrometry. The most common are based on the interaction of the proteins with colored compounds followed…
Descriptors: Chemistry, Science Instruction, Food, Color
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Wang, Bingxing; Jiang, Xiaoying; Zhang, Yu; Yu, Lu; Zhang, Yuping – Journal of Chemical Education, 2022
The mercury beating heart is a classic demonstration to introduce redox reactions in the classroom. Here we report a new, safer demonstration: the Galinstan beating heart. Galinstan is a commercially available eutectic alloy composed of gallium (68.5%), indium (21.5%), and tin (10%) that has low toxicity. When an iron nail touches the Galinstan…
Descriptors: Demonstrations (Educational), Science Instruction, Chemistry, Scientific Concepts
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Duc, le Anh; Duy, Nguyen Minh; B., Nguyen Quoc; Chat, Tran Ngoc; Hung, Nguyen Ngoc – Physics Teacher, 2022
The Wilson cloud chamber is an apparatus used for detecting and observing the trails of alpha/beta rays or even cosmic rays in saturated gas conditions. The principle of this device is based upon the powerful ionization of the aforementioned rays within the medium. This article will provide instruction for creating a classic version of the cloud…
Descriptors: Physics, Science Equipment, Science Instruction, Scientific Concepts
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Denny, Mark – Physics Teacher, 2022
A classical mechanical structure with an internal degree of freedom is shown to reflect off a potential well. Such behavior is impossible for point-like or rigid classical particles. This numerical study provides insight for students studying internal energy and degrees of freedom.
Descriptors: Water, Physics, Science Instruction, Energy
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Önder, Fatih; Önder, Esra Bilal; Ogur, Mehmet – Physics Teacher, 2022
It is well known that the needle of a compass in a magnetic field deflects, and that a compass near a conductive wire carrying a stable electric current deflects its needle. The only explanation of this observation is that the current-carrying wire creates a magnetic field around it. The strength of the magnetic field at any point near the wire…
Descriptors: Science Instruction, Science Experiments, Magnets, Scientific Concepts
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