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Peer reviewedChange, 1993
Four college educators critically examine an interaction in an introductory college physics classroom (HE 532 013). They explore the role of prior knowledge and new learning in the classroom discussion, misconceptions, the nature and content of the discussion, classroom techniques, use of language, and the process of concept formation. (MSE)
Descriptors: Case Studies, Classroom Communication, Classroom Techniques, College Instruction
Peer reviewedRasanen, Leila – European Education, 1992
Reviews international studies that show that girls have a poorer command of physical concepts than boys. Examines factors that might explain this phenomenon and discusses whether or not boys have different learning styles than girls. Recommends that science course content must be structured to fit girls' skills and interests. (CFR)
Descriptors: Cognitive Style, Course Content, Females, Foreign Countries
Peer reviewedKruger, C.; And Others – Science Education, 1992
Survey results contrast teachers' (n=159) knowledge and understanding with the understanding levels expected by England's science National Curriculum. Teacher's understanding with respect to the concepts of force, energy, and changes in materials are discussed. (Contains 29 references.) (MDH)
Descriptors: British National Curriculum, Elementary Education, Elementary School Teachers, Energy
Peer reviewedDykstra, D. I.; And Others – Science Education, 1992
Discusses (1) the need for teachers to understand student conceptions; (2) alternative conceptions that students formulate; (3) changing conceptions; (4) representing conceptual knowledge for studying conceptual change; (5) strategies for inducing change; and (6) a taxonomy of conceptual change. (Contains 61 references.) (MDH)
Descriptors: Beliefs, Classification, Cognitive Development, Cognitive Mapping
Peer reviewedLea, Suzanne M. – Journal of College Science Teaching, 1993
Describes the "Physics by Inquiry" course that is designed to address student misconceptions. Explains how the course was taught at the University of North Carolina at Greensboro for teachers and how it was taught at Ohio State University for elementary-education majors. Concludes the course is exportable to many different environments…
Descriptors: College Science, Earth Science, Experiential Learning, Higher Education
The Critical Role of Two-Year Colleges in Improving Science, Mathematics, and Engineering Education.
Peer reviewedRhoton, Jack – Journal of College Science Teaching, 1993
Discusses the current and future roles of two-year colleges in science, mathematics, and engineering education. (PR)
Descriptors: Biology, Chemistry, College Science, Earth Science
Sutter, Gary R. – NCSSSMST Journal, 1998
Describes a course that bridges the gap between pure science and pure technology called Pre-Engineering. This course gives junior and senior students a chance to investigate the possibility of choosing engineering as a major in college as well as to experience hands-on activities, projects, laboratories, problem solving, and computer simulations…
Descriptors: College Bound Students, Computer Simulation, Cooperative Learning, Course Descriptions
Brekke, Stewart E. – Spectrum, 1994
Factors that may affect success in high school or introductory college physics typically include cognitive structure such as formation of problem-solving schemata, visual-spatial abilities, induced cognitive structures of sex roles, and such external factors as teaching style and curriculum. All are important in passing a physics course as…
Descriptors: Cognitive Development, Curriculum Problems, High Schools, Higher Education
Peer reviewedLeander, Kevin M.; Brown, David E. – Cognition and Instruction, 1999
Develops a multidimensional framework for analyzing an extended physics classroom interaction to understand the resources participants use, alignments they form, and meanings and context they construct. Considers how participants negotiate their positions, focusing on one resistant student and why she remains unconvinced by others' arguments and…
Descriptors: Classroom Research, Discourse Analysis, Group Discussion, High School Students
Peer reviewedSharma, Manjula D.; Millar, Rosemary; Seth, Suman – International Journal of Science Education, 1999
Presents the results of introducing cooperative learning tutorials into large first-year physics classes at the University of Sydney. Finds that students attending more than half the total number of tutorials scored significantly better than those attending less than half. Student reaction to the tutorials was generally positive. Contains 31…
Descriptors: Computer Assisted Instruction, Foreign Countries, Higher Education, Individual Instruction
Peer reviewedSteinberg, Richard N. – American Journal of Physics, 2000
Describes an experience using a computer simulation on air resistance. There appeared to be differences in how students approach learning in interactive physics learning environments with and without the simulation. (Contains over 20 references.) (Author/WRM)
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Computer Simulation, Computer Uses in Education, Higher Education
Peer reviewedEylon, Bat-Sheva; And Others – Journal of Science Education and Technology, 1996
Explores the potential of the RAY learning environment in improving learning about optics. Results indicate that this environment, which includes a flexible ray-tracing simulation, had a significant effect on the spontaneous and correct use of the model by students in solving problems and a limited effect on conceptual understanding, but promoted…
Descriptors: Case Studies, Computer Uses in Education, Educational Technology, Foreign Countries
Merrill, M. David – Educational Technology, 2001
This instructional design looks at momentum in physics through railroading, to assist students in developing appropriate mental models that will enable them to solve problems relevant to the process or principle being taught. A PEAnet (process, entity, activity network) relationship enables an instructional visualization (simulation) in which…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Instructional Design, Instructional Development, Instructional Innovation
Peer reviewedMuller, Rainer – Physics Teacher, 2000
Explains how students can perform a refutation of the ether theory using information from the Global Positioning System (GPS). Discusses the functioning of the GPS, qualitatively describes how position determination would be affected by an ether wind, and illustrates the pertinent ideas with a simple quantitative model. (WRM)
Descriptors: High Schools, Higher Education, Mathematical Models, Physics
Pringle, Rose M. – Science Activities: Classroom Projects and Curriculum Ideas, 2004
This article describes a lesson in which students construct Bohr's planetary model of the atom. Niels Bohr's atomic model provides a framework for discussing with middle and high school students the historical development of our understanding of the structure of the atom. The model constructed in this activity will enable students to visualize the…
Descriptors: Models, High School Students, Middle School Students, Lesson Plans

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