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Azaiza, Ibtisam; Bar, Varda; Galili, Igal – International Journal of Science and Mathematics Education, 2006
The study investigated elementary school pupils' ideas concerning the concept of electricity and the effect of school instruction on the pupil's views. Pupils of different cultural backgrounds were assessed to ascertain their knowledge in four areas: Relation of certain natural phenomena to electricity; Mental models (images) of direct current in…
Descriptors: Concept Formation, Elementary School Science, Energy, Scientific Concepts
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Stamovlasis, Dimitrios; Tsaparlis, Georgios – International Journal of Science and Mathematics Education, 2005
We employ tools of complexity theory to examine the effect of cognitive variables, such as working-memory capacity, degree of field dependence-independence, developmental level and the mobility-fixity dimension. The nonlinear method correlates the subjects' rank-order achievement scores with each cognitive variable. From the achievement scores in…
Descriptors: Cognitive Style, Problem Solving, Scientific Concepts, Geometry
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Twidle, John – Educational Research, 2006
Background: Traditional studies of children's mastery of conservation of volume in liquids and solids have reported that conservation of volume in liquids is an easier concept to master than its solid counterpart. However, the two concepts have been assessed in different ways, with the assessment tool for solids employing a more complex process.…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Conservation (Concept), Science Activities, Age Differences
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Sharma, Manjula D.; Millar, Rosemary M.; Smith, Andrew; Sefton, Ian M. – Research in Science Education, 2004
We report on an investigation of students' ideas about gravity after a semester of instruction in physics at university. There are two aspects to the study which was concerned with students' answers to a carefully designed qualitative examination question on gravity. The first aspect is a classification of the answers and a comparative study of…
Descriptors: Physics, Scientific Concepts, College Science, Science Instruction
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Hatzinikita, Vassilia; Koulaidis, Vasilios; Hatzinikitas, Agapitos – Research in Science Education, 2005
The explanations of thirty primary pupils for changes in matter were recorded through individual, semi-structured interviews. The analysis of data pointed to the construction of a system for classifying pupils' explanations of changes in matter. A parallel analysis of data focused on the identification and interpretation of associations between…
Descriptors: Student Attitudes, Change Agents, Scientific Concepts, Interviews
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Oberle, Crystal D.; McBeath, Michael K.; Madigan, Sean C.; Sugar, Thomas G. – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 2005
This research introduces a new naive physics belief, the Galileo bias, whereby people ignore air resistance and falsely believe that all objects fall at the same rate. Survey results revealed that this bias is held by many and is surprisingly strongest for those with formal physics instruction. In 2 experiments, 98 participants dropped ball pairs…
Descriptors: Physics, Cognitive Processes, Influences, Bias
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Wicklein, Robert C. – Technology Teacher, 2005
Appropriate Technology (AT) concepts have been discussed throughout this past century by notable leaders and scholars such as Mohandas Gandhi and Julius Nyerere; however, the undisputed founder of the AT movement was E. F. Schumacher, a British economist who worked extensively in India and Burma during the 1950s and 60s. Schumacher encapsulated…
Descriptors: Appropriate Technology, Technology Education, Technological Literacy, Curriculum Design
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Espinoza, Fernando – Physics Education, 2004
The unquestionably central role of physics in the development of scientific literacy is undermined by its perceived difficulty. An investigation of high school students' use of the concepts of momentum and force suggests that, in the case of mechanics, the reason for physics' unpopularity and image as a "hard" subject is largely due to an…
Descriptors: Mechanics (Physics), Scientific Literacy, Scientific Concepts, High School Students
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Shkedy, Ziv; Aerts, Marc; Callaert, Herman – Journal of Statistics Education, 2006
Classical regression models, ANOVA models and linear mixed models are just three examples (out of many) in which the normal distribution of the response is an essential assumption of the model. In this paper we use a dataset of 2000 euro coins containing information (up to the milligram) about the weight of each coin, to illustrate that the…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Regression (Statistics), Models, Goodness of Fit
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Flory, S. Luke; Ingram, Ella L.; Heidinger, Britt J.; Tintjer, Tammy – American Biology Teacher, 2005
Laboratory components of introductory biology college-level courses are becoming increasingly rare. Due to the absence of laboratory funding and time, instructors at all levels are faced with the problem of implementing inquiry-based projects. In this article, the authors present an activity that they developed for the 50-minute discussion period…
Descriptors: Evolution, Inquiry, Undergraduate Study, Plants (Botany)
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Khodor, Julia; Halme, Dina Gould; Walker, Graham C. – Cell Biology Education, 2004
A typical undergraduate biology curriculum covers a very large number of concepts and details. We describe the development of a Biology Concept Framework (BCF) as a possible way to organize this material to enhance teaching and learning. Our BCF is hierarchical, places details in context, nests related concepts, and articulates concepts that are…
Descriptors: Biology, Undergraduate Students, Science Curriculum, Scientific Concepts
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Watters, Christopher – CBE - Life Sciences Education, 2006
For a eukaryotic cell biologist, learning new things about old, familiar subjects (such as the differences between eukaryotes and prokaryotes) is one of the pleasures of teaching introductory biology courses. Such learning usually entails examining how bacteria function, in ways other than how they replicate and transcribe DNA and how they…
Descriptors: Biology, Introductory Courses, Science Teachers, College Science
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Gass, Frederick – PRIMUS, 2006
Most beginning calculus courses spend little or no time on a technical definition of the limit concept. In most of the remaining courses, the definition presented is the traditional epsilon-delta definition. An alternative approach that bases the definition on infinite sequences has occasionally appeared in commercial textbooks but has not yet…
Descriptors: Calculus, Definitions, Scientific Concepts, Mathematical Concepts
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Dunne, Peter – Physics Education, 2002
The origins of the pion exchange model of nuclear forces are described and the exchange process is reinterpreted in the light of current views on the quark-gluon structure of nucleons. It is suggested that the reinterpretation might provide a picture of cohesive nuclear forces that is more intellectually satisfying than that produced by the…
Descriptors: Nuclear Physics, Quantum Mechanics, Molecular Structure, Scientific Concepts
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Noll, Ellis D. – Physics Education, 2002
At the pre-college and first-year college level of physics instruction, Kepler's laws are generally taught as empirical laws of nature. Introductory physics textbooks only derive Kepler's Second law of areas. It is possible to derive all of Kepler's laws mathematically from the conservation laws, employing only high-school algebra and geometry.…
Descriptors: Science Instruction, Physics, Algebra, Geometry
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