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Shultz, Jeff – Bioscene: Journal of College Biology Teaching, 2011
I have devised a method with which a molecular size standard can be readily manufactured using Lambda DNA and PCR. This method allows the production of specific sized DNA fragments and is easily performed in a standard molecular biology laboratory. The material required to create these markers can also be used to provide a highly robust and…
Descriptors: Genetics, Science Laboratories, Molecular Biology, Cost Effectiveness
Trakadis, Yannis; Shevell, Michael – Developmental Medicine & Child Neurology, 2011
Aim: Microarray technology has a significantly higher clinical yield than karyotyping in individuals with global developmental delay (GDD). Despite this, it has not yet been routinely implemented as a screening test owing to the perception that this approach is more expensive. We aimed to evaluate the effect that replacing karyotype with…
Descriptors: Intervals, Screening Tests, Genetics, Laboratories
Lane, Frank – Physics Education, 2011
The mini dark room from Holywell High School costs nothing to make and has a construction time of 10 min. In spite of progress, or perhaps because of it, light experiments often have to be performed without blackout. Put this idea into practice and each pupil can have a dark room--and best of all, it's free. In this article, the author describes…
Descriptors: Science Instruction, Secondary School Science, High Schools, Light
Aurora, Tarlok S.; Brunner, Bernard J. – Physics Education, 2011
In introductory physics, students learn that an object tossed upward has a constant downward acceleration while going up, at the highest point and while falling down. To demonstrate this concept, a self-propelled fan cart system is used on a frictionless track. A quick push is given to the fan cart and it is allowed to move away on a track under…
Descriptors: Physics, Motion, Science Instruction, Scientific Principles
Ibanez, Jorge G.; Guerra-Millan, Francisco J.; Hugerat, Muhamad; Vazquez-Olavarrieta, Jorge L.; Basheer, Ahmad; Abu-Much, Riam – Journal of Chemical Education, 2011
The existence of solvated electrons has been known for a long time. Key methods for their production (i.e., photoionization of reducing ions, water radiolysis, and the reaction between H[middle dot] and OH[superscript -]) are unsuitable for most school laboratories. We describe a simple experiment to produce liquid ammonia and solvated electrons…
Descriptors: Chemistry, Science Laboratories, Molecular Structure, Science Experiments
Wade, Edmir O.; Walsh, Kenneth E. – Journal of Chemical Education, 2011
In recent years, there has been an explosion of research concerning the area of organocatalysis. A multistep capstone laboratory project that combines traditional reactions frequently found in organic laboratory curriculums with this new field of research is described. In this experiment, the students synthesize a prolinamide-based organocatalyst…
Descriptors: Science Laboratories, College Science, Science Instruction, Organic Chemistry
Troiani, Diana; Manni, Ermanno – Advances in Physiology Education, 2011
Using an excised pig heart preparation with tubes, a manometer, and a visualizing apparatus, Giulio Ceradini, an Italian physiologist working in the years of 1871-1872 in Carl Ludwig's famous laboratory in Leipzig, Germany, illustrated the mechanism of closure of the semilunar valves. He was the first to conceive that the closure of the heart…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, German, Animals, Physiology
Sa, Creso M.; Oleksiyenko, Anatoly – Higher Education: The International Journal of Higher Education and Educational Planning, 2011
Organized research units--also known as centers, institutes, and laboratories--are increasingly prominent in the university. This paper examines how ORUs emerge to promote global agendas and international collaborations in an academic health center in North America. The roles these units play in helping researchers work across institutional and…
Descriptors: Research and Instruction Units, Laboratories, Biomedicine, Universities
Greenslade, Thomas B., Jr. – Physics Teacher, 2011
In my previous article on apparatus named after physicists and physics teachers, I discussed five relatively common pieces of apparatus from the 1875-1910 era. Now I will go back to the 18th and early-19th centuries to discuss eponymous apparatus that we are still using in lecture demonstrations. [For Part I, see EJ912907.]
Descriptors: Physics, Science Instruction, Laboratory Equipment, Scientists
Lieberherr, Martin – Physics Teacher, 2011
The centripetal acceleration has been known since Huygens' (1659) and Newton's (1684) time. The physics to calculate the acceleration of a simple pendulum has been around for more than 300 years, and a fairly complete treatise has been given by C. Schwarz in this journal. But sentences like "the acceleration is always directed towards the…
Descriptors: Physics, Laboratory Equipment, Science Equipment, Motion
Miller, Tyson A.; Spangler, Michael; Burdette, Shawn C. – Journal of Chemical Education, 2011
A two-period organic laboratory experiment that includes fluorescence sensing is presented. The pH-sensitive sensor MorphFl is prepared using a Mannich reaction between a fluorescein derivative and the iminium ion of morpholine. During the first laboratory, students prepare MorphFl. The second session begins with characterizing the sensor using…
Descriptors: Science Instruction, Science Laboratories, Organic Chemistry, Lighting
Taber, Douglass F.; Li, Rui; Anson, Cory M. – Journal of Chemical Education, 2011
A simple procedure for the isolation of the cholesterol, by hydrolysis and extraction followed by column chromatography, is described. The cholesterol can be further purified by complexation with oxalic acid. It can also be oxidized and conjugated to cholestenone. The source of the cholesterol is one egg yolk, which contains about 200 mg of…
Descriptors: Organic Chemistry, Laboratory Procedures, Scientific Concepts, Science Education
Dintzner, Matthew R.; Kinzie, Charles R.; Pulkrabek, Kimberly A.; Arena, Anthony F. – Journal of Chemical Education, 2011
SIPCAn, an acronym for separation, isolation, purification, characterization, and analysis, is presented as a one-term, integrated project for the first-term undergraduate organic laboratory course. Students are assigned two mixtures of unknown organic compounds--a mixture of two liquid compounds and a mixture of two solid compounds--at the…
Descriptors: Organic Chemistry, Science Laboratories, College Science, Science Instruction
Fies, Carmen; Langman, Juliet – International Journal of Science and Mathematics Education, 2011
We report on a case study that took place in a southwestern culturally and linguistically diverse urban high school science classroom during a grade recovery summer session. The introduction of a technology-infused unit on epidemiology engaged students in a multi-contextual exploration of the spread of diseases. The analysis of the resultant…
Descriptors: Epidemiology, Case Studies, Biology, Science Education
Wadso, Lars; Li, Yujing; Li, Xi – Journal of Chemical Education, 2011
Isothermal titration calorimetry (ITC) is the measurement of the heat produced by the stepwise addition of one substance to another. It is a common experimental technique, for example, in pharmaceutical science, to measure equilibrium constants and reaction enthalpies. We describe a stirring device and an injection pump that can be used with a…
Descriptors: Chemistry, Science Laboratories, Heat, Science Instruction

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