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Siegel, Harvey – Phi Delta Kappan, 1981
Addresses both the issues raised by the recent trial in Sacramento (California), "Scopes II," which pitted evolution against scientific creationism, and the questions that stem from the trial's failure to address those issues. (Author/WD)
Descriptors: Court Litigation, Creationism, Elementary Secondary Education, Evolution
Peer reviewedSwanson, Don R. – Library Quarterly, 1980
Maintains that national information policy should be geared to the preservation and encouragement of trial-and-error evolutionary mechanisms that will stimulate innovation in library and information services. Seventeen references are cited. (FM)
Descriptors: Diffusion, Evolution, Information Services, Information Systems
Gould, Stephen Jay – Natural History, 1980
Discussed is the potential of vestigial structures and unexpressed developmental patterns from an organism's natural history to provide for rapid morphological change based on small genetic change which may call these suppressed attributes back into action in modified form. (RE)
Descriptors: Biological Influences, Biology, Ecology, Environment
Peer reviewedBudelmann, Bernd-Ulrich – Oceanus, 1980
Describes the structure of the equilibrium receptor system in cephalopods, comparing it to the vertebrate counterpart--the vestibular system. Relates the evolution of this complex system to the competition of cephalopods with fishes. (CS)
Descriptors: Biology, College Science, Evolution, Marine Biology
Peer reviewedWilcox, R. Stimson – Oceanus, 1980
Discusses how surface-dwelling animals use the water surface as a mode of communication by making ripple signals while they swim about. Provides information about surfaces and surface waves, ripple communication in water striders, ripple signal characteristics, sensing and orienting, other modes of communication, and evolution of ripple…
Descriptors: Biology, College Science, Evolution, Marine Biology
Wells, Calvin – Biology and Human Affairs, 1978
Discusses disease and genetic disorders as evolutionary mechanisms. Emphasizes the archeological evidence from past human populations and societies, mentioning albinism, scurvy, sleeping sickness, bone conditions, various host-parasite relationships, rickets, sickle-cell anemia, diabetes, and influenza. (CS)
Descriptors: Anthropology, Biology, Diseases, Evolution
Reynolds, V. – Biology and Human Affairs, 1979
Outlines and discusses characteristics of an ethological perspective on mental illness, which emphasizes the evolutionary background of humanity, his recent background since the agricultural and industrial revolutions, and the physiological and psychosomatic factors of the human species in dealing with stress. (CS)
Descriptors: Anthropology, Biology, Evolution, Higher Education
Peer reviewedBird, Wendell R. – Harvard Journal of Law and Public Policy, 1979
Argues for a substantial neutrality test to replace the absolute separation form of the tripartite test in construing and applying the establishment clause of the First Amendment. Available from Harvard Society for Law and Public Policy, Inc., Langdell Hall, Harvard Law School, Cambridge, MA 02138; $4.00 per issue. (Author/IRT)
Descriptors: Constitutional Law, Evolution, Government Role, Parochial Schools
Peer reviewedDemaret, J. L.; Vandermeulen, J. E. H. L. – Impact of Science on Society, 1979
Discusses the hypothesis studied by astrophysicists on the symmetry between matter and anti-matter in the composition of the universe. (HM)
Descriptors: Astronomy, Electronics, Evolution, Matter
Peer reviewedPasachoff, Jay M. – Physics Teacher, 1979
Discusses some of the basic theories in cosmology, such as Hubble's laws and the big-bang theories, and looks at some of the ideas of astronomers and scientists with respect to their evaluation of the future of the universe. (GA)
Descriptors: Astronomy, College Science, Evolution, Higher Education
Peer reviewedSchlessman, Mark A. – American Biology Teacher, 1997
Describes two investigative labs that use live plants to illustrate important biological principles, include quantitative analysis, and require very little equipment. Each lab is adaptable to a variety of class sizes, course contents, and student backgrounds. Topics include the evolution of flower size in Mimulus and pollination of Brassicas. (DDR)
Descriptors: Biology, Data Analysis, Evolution, Higher Education
Peer reviewedTrowbridge, John E.; Wandersee, James H. – Journal of College Science Teaching, 1996
Explores the use of concept mapping in a college course on evolution and the effect of the use of graphics in the instructional process on the construction of a concept map. Results indicate a positive correlation between concept map scores and the number of graphics used by the instructor during lecture. (JRH)
Descriptors: Biology, Concept Mapping, Educational Strategies, Evolution
Peer reviewedLeonard, William H.; Edmondson, Elizabeth – American Biology Teacher, 2003
Presents an activity called "The Hardy-Weinberg Equilibrium, Founder Effect, and Evolution" to allow students to learn about evolution in an engaging, constructivist manner. The activity also uses the tools of mathematics to learn several related biology concepts. (Author/SOE)
Descriptors: Biology, Evolution, Integrated Activities, Mathematical Applications
Peer reviewedMalamuth, Neil M. – Journal of Communication, 1996
Notes that media scholars often resist the use of the evolutionary paradigm. Discusses two problems: an overly simplistic view of evolutionary models; and a distrust of ideological implications. Develops an evolutionary model proposing that gender differences in the consumption of sexually explicit media is, in part, the result of inherited…
Descriptors: Evolution, Higher Education, Mass Media Use, Mate Selection
Peer reviewedKephart, Susan R.; Butler, Jennifer; Foust, Andrea – American Biology Teacher, 2002
Introduces a laboratory activity on biological diversity that focuses on mollusks and trees. (YDS)
Descriptors: Biodiversity, Biology, Ecology, Evolution


