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Judge, Sarah; Delgaty, Laura; Broughton, Mark; Dyter, Laura; Grimes, Callum; Metcalf, James; Nicholson, Rose; Pennock, Erin; Jankowski, Karl – Journal of Biological Education, 2017
A team of six children (13-14 years old) developed and conducted an experiment to assess the behaviour of the planarian flatworm, an invertebrate animal model, before, during and after exposure to chemicals. The aim of the project was to engage children in pharmacology and toxicology research. First, the concept that exposure to chemicals can…
Descriptors: Science Experiments, Pharmacology, Toxicology, Scientific Research
Fouché, Jaunine; Crowley, Joel – Educational Leadership, 2017
Elementary students at the Milton Hershey School in Hershey, Pennsylvania, don't just learn knowledge and skills; they put it to work. The school's Innovation Lab for grades K-4 offers students hands-on opportunities to use design thinking to solve problems. In this article, two of the school's educators describe how 2nd graders used design…
Descriptors: Elementary School Students, Experiential Learning, Problem Solving, Grade 2
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Bierema, Andrea M.-K.; Schwartz, Renee S.; Gill, Sharon A. – Journal of Research in Science Teaching, 2017
Recent calls for reform in education recommend science curricula to be based on central ideas instead of a larger number of topics and for alignment between current scientific research and curricula. Because alignment is rarely studied, especially for central ideas, we developed a methodology to discover the extent of alignment between primary…
Descriptors: Scientific Research, Textbook Content, Methods, Case Studies
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Trott, Daniel W.; Harrison, David G. – Advances in Physiology Education, 2014
While hypertension has predominantly been attributed to perturbations of the vasculature, kidney, and central nervous system, research for almost 50 yr has shown that the immune system also contributes to this disease. Inflammatory cells accumulate in the kidneys and vasculature of humans and experimental animals with hypertension and likely…
Descriptors: Hypertension, Metabolism, Animals, Neurology
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Bähring, Robert; Bauer, Christiane K. – Advances in Physiology Education, 2014
The generation and conduction of neuronal action potentials (APs) were the subjects of a cell physiology exercise for first-year medical students. In this activity, students demonstrated the all-or-none nature of AP generation, measured conduction velocity, and examined the dependence of the threshold stimulus amplitude on stimulus duration. For…
Descriptors: Cytology, Physiology, Medical Students, Animals
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Baker, Phillip M.; Ragozzino, Michael E. – Learning & Memory, 2014
Switches in reward outcomes or reward-predictive cues are two fundamental ways in which information is used to flexibly shift response patterns. The rat prelimbic cortex and dorsomedial striatum support behavioral flexibility based on a change in outcomes. The present experiments investigated whether these two brain regions are necessary for…
Descriptors: Brain, Animals, Cues, Rewards
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France, Bev; Birdsall, Sally – European Journal of Science and Mathematics Education, 2015
A DVD resource that provided a scientist's perspective on the use of animals in research and teaching was evaluated with a questionnaire that asked students' views pre and post their access to the resource. Thirty-nine secondary students (Y10-Y13) took part in three different teaching programmes that provided information about animal research and…
Descriptors: Secondary School Students, Scientists, Student Attitudes, Research
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Ruetti, Eliana; Burgueno, Adriana L.; Justel, Nadia R.; Pirola, Carlos J.; Mustaca, Alba E. – Psicologica: International Journal of Methodology and Experimental Psychology, 2013
Neonatal administration of clomipramine (CLI) produces physiological, neuroendocrinal and behavioral abnormalities in rats when they reach adulthood, which are similar to those observed in animal models of depression. In consummatory successive negative contrast (cSNC), rats that have had experience drinking 32% sucrose solution drink…
Descriptors: Animals, Depression (Psychology), Mental Disorders, Drug Therapy
Luczak-Roesch, Markus; Anderson, Dayle; Glasson, Brigitte; Doyle, Cathal; Li, Yevgeniya; Pierson, Cameron; David, Rodreck – Teaching and Learning Research Initiative, 2019
This project aimed to assess the impact of online citizen science (OCS) participation on the science education of primary school children in New Zealand. Four exploratory cases were used to examine the nature and impact of embedding OCS projects that use web-based online tools within primary classroom environments. Findings provide key insights…
Descriptors: Elementary School Students, Science Education, Elementary School Science, Elementary School Teachers
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Day, Brian A.; DeWan, Amielle; Cadiz, Fel Ceasar; Jakosalem-Balane, Joy; Dueñas, Vincent; Trinidad, Pedro M., Jr. – Applied Environmental Education and Communication, 2014
Rare's approach to promoting sustainable fishing through social marketing in the Philippines is exemplified in the Cortes Pride campaign. The Cortes Pride campaign is a social marketing behavior change program that was part of a cohort of 12 similar sustainable fishing campaigns in the Philippines, all of which used a unique blend of social…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Sustainability, Marine Biology, Animals
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Thai, Ngoc Thuy Thi; De Wever, Bram; Valcke, Martin – Journal of Computer Assisted Learning, 2020
This study compares four learning environments: face-to-face learning (F2F), fully e-learning (EL), blended learning (BL), and flipped classroom (FC) with respect to students' learning performance. Moreover, this present research studies changes in perceived flexibility, intrinsic motivation, self-efficacy beliefs of students, and the interaction…
Descriptors: Blended Learning, Teaching Methods, Comparative Analysis, Self Efficacy
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Pierce, Clayton – Cultural Studies of Science Education, 2015
This article uses actor network theory (ANT) to develop a more appropriate model of scientific literacy for students, teachers, and citizens in a society increasingly populated with biotechnological and bioscientific nonhumans. In so doing, I take the recent debate surrounding the first genetically engineered animal food product under review by…
Descriptors: Scientific Literacy, Social Theories, Science and Society, Biological Sciences
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Belwal, Rakesh; Belwal, Shweta; Al Jabri, Omar – Journal of Vocational Education and Training, 2015
Oman's 3165-km-long coastline, which includes bays, islands and lagoons, has been rich in fish and crustaceans. In spite of this, the fishing sector and fishermen in Oman have not developed well. The fishermen have just managed to subsist and their motivation to stay in the traditional or artisanal fishery has declined. Assuming that the…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Educational Needs, Needs Assessment, Semiskilled Workers
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Sharpe, Melissa J.; Killcross, Simon – Learning & Memory, 2015
The prelimbic cortex is argued to promote conditioned fear expression, at odds with appetitive research implicating this region in attentional processing. Consistent with an attentional account, we report that the effect of prelimbic lesions on fear expression depends on the degree of competition between contextual and discrete cues. Further, when…
Descriptors: Brain Hemisphere Functions, Cues, Context Effect, Attention
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Zhang, Wen-Hua; Williams, Ziv M. – Learning & Memory, 2015
Once a memory has formed, it is thought to undergo a gradual transition within the brain from short- to long-term storage. This putative process, however, also poses a unique problem to the memory system in that the same learned items must also be retrieved across broadly varying time scales. Here, we find that neurons in the ventrolateral…
Descriptors: Memory, Brain Hemisphere Functions, Animals, Intervals
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