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McCall, Richard P. – Physics Teacher, 2013
Systematic errors can cause measurements to deviate from the actual value of the quantity being measured. Faulty equipment (such as a meterstick that is not marked correctly), inaccurate calibration of measuring devices (such as a scale to measure mass that has not been properly zeroed), and improper use of equipment by the experimenter (such as…
Descriptors: Physics, Science Instruction, Laboratory Equipment, Science Laboratories
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Buckley, Heather L.; Beck, Annelise R.; Mulvihill, Martin J.; Douskey, Michelle C. – Journal of Chemical Education, 2013
Several principles of green chemistry are introduced through this experiment designed for use in the undergraduate analytical chemistry laboratory. An established experiment of liquid CO2 extraction of D-limonene has been adapted to include a quantitative analysis by gas chromatography. This facilitates drop-in incorporation of an exciting…
Descriptors: Science Laboratories, College Science, Undergraduate Study, Science Instruction
Cole, Ryan A.; Slavin, Alan J. – Journal of Visual Impairment & Blindness, 2013
This article describes a case study involving an assistive device that aided a student with low vision registered in the introductory physics course at Trent University in the fall of 2009. His Snellen visual acuity fluctuated significantly, with an average acuity of about 20/400. This low acuity presented obvious difficulties for him with the…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Assistive Technology, Physics, Science Instruction
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Cheek, Kim A. – Science and Children, 2013
Earth's surface is constantly changing. Weathering, erosion, and deposition break down Earth materials, transport those materials, and place them in new locations. Children see evidence of these processes all around them. The sidewalk or playground surface cracks and has plants growing in it. Pieces of a rock wall or the sides of a building…
Descriptors: Grade 4, Elementary School Science, Earth Science, Science Instruction
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Schmidt-Borcherding, Florian; Hänze, Martin; Wodzinski, Rita; Rincke, Karsten – European Journal of Psychology of Education, 2013
The study explores if established support devices for paper-pencil problem solving, namely worked examples and incremental scaffolds, are applicable to laboratory tasks. N?=?173 grade eight students solved in dyads a physics laboratory task in one of three conditions. In condition A (unguided problem solving), students were asked to determine the…
Descriptors: Scaffolding (Teaching Technique), Laboratory Experiments, Physics, Science Instruction
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Ladino, L. A. – Physics Education, 2013
A different method to study the charging and discharging processes of a capacitor is presented. The method only requires a high impedance voltmeter. The charging and discharging processes of a capacitor are usually studied experimentally using an oscilloscope and, therefore, both processes are studied as a function of time. The approach presented…
Descriptors: Science Instruction, Physics, Scientific Concepts, Science Experiments
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Braithwaite, David W.; Goldstone, Robert L. – Journal of Educational Psychology, 2013
The terms "concreteness fading" and "progressive formalization" have been used to describe instructional approaches to science and mathematics that use grounded representations to introduce concepts and later transition to more formal representations of the same concepts. There are both theoretical and empirical reasons to…
Descriptors: Mathematics Instruction, Science Instruction, Instructional Effectiveness, Teaching Methods
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Neilan, Rachael Miller – PRIMUS, 2013
This article describes a computational project designed for undergraduate students as an introduction to mathematical modeling. Students use an ordinary differential equation to describe fish weight and assume the instantaneous growth rate depends on the concentration of dissolved oxygen. Published laboratory experiments suggest that continuous…
Descriptors: Undergraduate Students, Mathematical Models, Calculus, Ichthyology
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Senko, Corwin; Durik, Amanda M.; Patel, Lily; Lovejoy, Chelsea M.; Valentiner, David – Learning and Instruction, 2013
Two studies examined the effects of university students' achievement goals on performance under low versus high challenge conditions. The first was a laboratory experiment in which participants were assigned goals to pursue on a novel mathematics task alleged to be simple or complex to use. The second was a survey study in which students set goals…
Descriptors: College Students, Academic Achievement, Goal Orientation, Performance
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Tipton, Elizabeth – Journal of Educational and Behavioral Statistics, 2013
As a result of the use of random assignment to treatment, randomized experiments typically have high internal validity. However, units are very rarely randomly selected from a well-defined population of interest into an experiment; this results in low external validity. Under nonrandom sampling, this means that the estimate of the sample average…
Descriptors: Generalization, Experiments, Classification, Computation
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Ziwisky, Michael; Persohn, Kyle; Brylow, Dennis – ACM Transactions on Computing Education, 2013
We present "Xipx," the first port of a major educational operating system to a processor in the emerging class of many-core architectures. Through extensions to the proven Embedded Xinu operating system, Xipx gives students hands-on experience with system programming in a distributed message-passing environment. We expose the software primitives…
Descriptors: Computer Software, Technology Uses in Education, Information Management, Computer Science
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Ferguson, Megan A.; Kozlowski, Joseph J. – Journal of Chemical Education, 2013
An upper-division instrumental chemistry laboratory has been developed in which students use atomic force microscopy (AFM) to collect force curves on polydimethylsiloxane (PDMS) elastomers. Force curves are used to quantify the stiffness of elastomers prepared with different base-to-curing agent ratios. Trends in observed spring constants of the…
Descriptors: Science Instruction, College Science, Chemistry, Science Laboratories
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Melanson, Michelle; Sood, Abha; Torok, Fanni; Torok, Marianna – Biochemistry and Molecular Biology Education, 2013
An undergraduate laboratory exercise is described to demonstrate the biochemical applications of electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) spectroscopy. The beta93 cysteine residue of hemoglobin is labeled by the covalent binding of 3-maleimido-proxyl (5-MSL) and 2,2,5,5-tetramethyl-1-oxyl-3-methyl methanethiosulfonate (MTSL), respectively. The excess…
Descriptors: College Science, Science Laboratories, Undergraduate Study, Science Instruction
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Ciaccio, James A.; Alam, Rabeka; D'Agrosa, Christina D.; Deal, Amanda E.; Marcelin, David – Journal of Chemical Education, 2013
The essential oil of "Nepeta cataria" L. (catnip), an herbaceous plant known popularly as a stimulant for the domestic cat, is enriched in two diastereomeric iridoid lactones (nepetalactones) that vary in ratio. Although the diastereomers are chromatographically separable and exhibit different 1D NMR spectra, it is not possible to…
Descriptors: Science Instruction, College Science, Organic Chemistry, Undergraduate Study
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Campbell, Dean J.; Baliss, Michelle S.; Hinman, Jordan J.; Ziegenhorn, John W.; Andrews, Mark J.; Stevenson, Keith J. – Journal of Chemical Education, 2013
Production of thin metal oxide films was recently explored as part of an outreach program with a goal of producing nanoscale structures with household items. Household items coated with various metals or titanium compounds can be heated to produce colorful films with nanoscale thicknesses. As part of a materials chemistry laboratory experiment…
Descriptors: Science Instruction, Metallurgy, Chemistry, Science Experiments
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