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Peer reviewedFord, Alan R.; Burns, William A.; Reeve, Scott W. – Journal of Chemical Education, 2004
A version of the classic gas phase infrared experiment was developed for students at Arkansas State University based on the shortcomings of the rotationally resolved infrared experiment. Chem Spec II is a noncommercial Windows-based software package developed to aid in the potentially complicated problem of assigning quantum numbers to observed…
Descriptors: Computer Software, Chemistry, Undergraduate Study, Science Laboratories
Peer reviewedThacker, Beth Ann – American Journal of Physics, 2003
Interviews university students in modern physics about their understanding of three fundamental experiments. Explores their development of models of microscopic processes. Uses interactive demonstrations to probe student understanding of modern physics experiments in two high school physics classes. Analyzes the nature of students' models and the…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Concept Formation, Higher Education, Learning Strategies
Goldsworthy, Anne – Primary Science Review, 2005
Start at the end; that's the way to improve children's plans for investigations. Strange as it may seem, there are times when beginning at the beginning of an investigation is not the best way to start things off. To give children the opportunity to ask questions and plan what to do, sometimes it is best to get them first to consider others' data…
Descriptors: Investigations, Experiential Learning, Young Children, Science Experiments
Peer reviewedRinglein, James – Science Teacher, 2005
Violins, earthquakes, and the "singing rod" demonstration all have something in common--stick-slip frictional motion. The application of stick-slip friction can be extended to a ringing wineglass, exotic percussion instruments, car racing, and the latest research on the interplay between surfaces at the atomic level. These examples all involve two…
Descriptors: Motion, Physics, Demonstrations (Educational), Science Experiments
Cowley, Les; Laven, Philip; Vollmer, Michael – Physics Education, 2005
Atmospheric optical effects can teach much about physics and especially optics. Coronae--coloured rings around the sun or moon--are large-scale consequences of diffraction, which is often thought of as only a small effect confined to the laboratory. We describe coronae, how they are formed and experiments that can be conducted on ones in the sky.…
Descriptors: Optics, Laboratory Experiments, Science Experiments, Science Instruction
Hinchcliffe, Edward H. – Cell Biology Education, 2005
Cinemicrography--the capture of moving cellular sequences through the microscope--has been influential in revealing the dynamic nature of cellular behavior. One of the more dramatic cellular events is mitosis, the division of sister chromatids into two daughter cells. Mitosis has been extensively studied in a variety of organisms, both…
Descriptors: Cytology, Visual Aids, Video Technology, Laboratory Equipment
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)
Kraftmakher, Yaakov – Physics Education, 2002
An experiment is proposed for learning the principles of radio. A simple radio receiver illustrates amplitude modulation and demodulation, the selectivity of a receiver and the features of a directional antenna. Both normal and computerized versions of the experiment are described. The computerized experiment employs the "ScienceWorkshop"…
Descriptors: Laboratory Experiments, Radio, Acoustics, Physics
Locke, M.; Dean, Rob L. – American Biology Teacher, 2003
Old bones are often discolored by the grime that infiltrates spaces in the matrix once occupied by blood vessels. This suggested that allowing dry bone to absorb colorants might be a useful way to show the three dimensional complexity of bone vascularization. The authors have developed a simple way to show blood vessels spaces in bone at a glance…
Descriptors: Science Instruction, Human Body, Science Experiments, Biology
Avant, Thomas – Science Teacher, 2002
This article describes an experiment, designed by Cindy Henk, manager of the Socolofsky Microscopy Center at Louisiana State University (LSU), that involved collecting and viewing microorganisms in the air-water interface. The experiment was participated by Leesville High School microbiology students. The students found that the air-water…
Descriptors: Microbiology, High School Students, Science Experiments, Water
Scheppler, Judith A.; Sethakorn, Nan; Styer, Susan – Science Teacher, 2003
The Kirby-Bauer assay, also called the disc diffusion assay, is a standard procedure used in clinical laboratories to test the susceptibility of patients' bacterial isolates to antibiotics. In the assay, the bacteria are swabbed onto an agar plate, and paper discs impregnated with antibiotics are placed on the agar. The antibiotic diffuses from…
Descriptors: Science Laboratories, Microbiology, Critical Thinking, Thinking Skills
Shmaefsky, Brian – Journal of College Science Teaching, 2004
Demonstrations are sometimes perceived as merely entertaining and expendable ancillaries for lectures and laboratory sessions. Nothing can be further from the truth. If done properly, demonstrations have much more value than lectures and labs when used to teach critical thinking in the sciences. There are effective ways to model scientific…
Descriptors: Scientific Principles, Demonstrations (Educational), Teaching Methods, Science Instruction
Kendler, Barry S.; Grove, Patricia A. – Journal of College Science Teaching, 2005
A serendipitous finding involving static magnetic fields can be used to design experiments suitable for both science and nonscience majors. It has been reported that organisms respond differently to high-gauss magnetic fields generated by north poles than they do to those generated by south poles. Experimental tests of this hypothesis are ideal…
Descriptors: Introductory Courses, Physics, Science Instruction, Teaching Methods
Kjonaas, Richard A.; Mattingly, Shawn P. – Journal of Chemical Education, 2005
The acid-catalyzed isomerization of carvone to carvacrol, first reported by Ritter and Ginsburg, is especially well suited with a permanent-magnet FT instrument. The acid-catalyzed isomerization of carvone to carvacrol produced a 61% yield after a three hour reflux with 30% aqueous sulfuric acid.
Descriptors: Chemistry, Science Education, Laboratory Experiments, Science Experiments
Helms, T. C.; Doetkott, C. – Journal of Natural Resources and Life Sciences Education, 2007
We developed educational software to show graduate students how to plan molecular marker experiments. These computer simulations give the students feedback on the precision of their experiments. The objective of the software was to show students using a hands-on approach how: (1) environmental variation influences the range of the estimates of the…
Descriptors: Intervals, Computer Software, Graduate Study, Genetics

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