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Lin, Jing – EURASIA Journal of Mathematics, Science & Technology Education, 2016
This study focuses on the internal conditions of students' concept learning and builds a learning cycle' based on the "phases of the Moon" (MP) to, deepen students' understanding. The learning cycle of MP developed in this study includes three basic learning links, which are: cognitive conflict, abstraction and generalization, and…
Descriptors: Astronomy, Science Instruction, Scientific Concepts, Observation
Olmstead, Alice; Turpen, Chandra – Physical Review Physics Education Research, 2016
Professional development workshops are one of the primary mechanisms used to help faculty improve their teaching, and draw in many STEM instructors every year. Although workshops serve a critical role in changing instructional practices within our community, we rarely assess workshops through careful consideration of how they engage faculty.…
Descriptors: Professional Development, STEM Education, Workshops, Elementary Secondary Education
Schmidt, Matthew; Fulton, Lori – Journal of Science Education and Technology, 2016
The need to prepare students with twenty-first-century skills through STEM-related teaching is strong, especially at the elementary level. However, most teacher education preparation programs do not focus on STEM education. In an attempt to provide an exemplary model of a STEM unit, we used a rapid prototyping approach to transform an…
Descriptors: STEM Education, Preservice Teacher Education, Elementary School Teachers, Elementary School Science
Hintz, Eric G.; Jones, Michael D.; Lawler, M. Jeannette; Bench, Nathan; Mangrubang, Fred – Journal of Astronomy & Earth Sciences Education, 2015
Accommodating the planetarium experience to members of the deaf or hard-of-hearing community has often created situations that are either disruptive to the rest of the audience or provide an insufficient accommodation. To address this issue, we examined the use of head-mounted displays to deliver an American Sign Language "sound track"…
Descriptors: American Sign Language, Deafness, Hearing Impairments, Recreational Facilities
Baird, William H.; Padgett, Clifford W.; Secrest, Jeffery A. – Physics Education, 2015
Google Earth has made a wealth of aerial imagery available online at no cost to users. We examine some of the potential uses of that data in illustrating basic physics and astronomy, such as finding the local magnetic declination, using landmarks such as the Washington Monument and Luxor Obelisk as gnomons, and showing how airport runways get…
Descriptors: Science Instruction, Educational Technology, Technology Uses in Education, Astronomy
Pold, Jack; Mulvey, Patrick – AIP Statistical Research Center, 2015
Each fall the Statistical Research Center (SRC) conducts its Survey of Enrollments and Degrees, which asks all degree-granting physics and astronomy departments in the US to provide information concerning the numbers of students they have enrolled and counts of recent degree recipients. In connection with this survey, SRC asks for the names and…
Descriptors: Astronomy, College Graduates, Employment, Graduate Surveys
Park, Su-Kyeong – EURASIA Journal of Mathematics, Science & Technology Education, 2013
The aim of this study was to reveal whether there were differences in the understanding of scientific models according to their conceptions of lunar phases. The participants were 252 10th grader in South Korea. They were asked to respond SUMS (Students Understanding of Models in Science) instrument and to draw and explain why the different lunar…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Secondary School Students, Grade 10, Astronomy
Cheon, Jongpil; Lee, Sangno; Smith, Walter; Song, Jaeki; Kim, Yongjin – Research in Science Education, 2013
The purpose of this study was to use text mining analysis of early adolescents' online essays to determine their knowledge of global lunar patterns. Australian and American students in grades five to seven wrote about global lunar patterns they had discovered by sharing observations with each other via the Internet. These essays were analyzed for…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Misconceptions, Essays, Astronomy
Mola, E. E.; Irurzun, I. M.; Quina, P. L. Dammig – Physics Education, 2012
The purpose of this article is to describe the construction of a Sun clock and calendar (SCandC) that will allow an observer to not only see the time but also the symmetry properties of the Sun-Earth relative movement. A set of circles drawn on the SCandC will allow the observer to see their associated dates as well as to perform a visual…
Descriptors: Comparative Analysis, Scientific Concepts, Time, Geometric Concepts
Ashmann, Scott – Science Scope, 2012
The Moon is an ever-present subject of observation, and it is a recurring topic in the science curriculum from kindergarten's basic observations through graduate courses' mathematical analyses of its orbit. How do students come to comprehend Earth's nearest neighbor? What is needed for them to understand the lunar phases and other phenomena and…
Descriptors: Astronomy, Misconceptions, Science Curriculum, Observation
Corrao, Christian – Physics Teacher, 2012
Presented here is an adaptation of George Gamow's derivation of the centripetal acceleration formula as it applies to Earth's orbiting Moon. The derivation appears in Gamows short but engaging book "Gravity", first published in 1962, and is essentially a distillation of Newton's work. While "TPT" contributors have offered several insightful…
Descriptors: Physics, Astronomy, Motion, Scientific Principles
Roman, Harry T. – Tech Directions, 2012
Every day, the sun showers the Earth with millions of times more energy than its people use. The only problem is that energy is spread out over the entire Earth's surface and must be harvested. Engineers are learning to capture and use some of this energy to make electricity for homes. Solar panels make up the heart of a solar system. They can be…
Descriptors: Astronomy, Energy, Mathematics, Heat
Linton, J. O. – Physics Education, 2012
As teachers, we want to encourage our students to ask searching questions on topics like how old the Universe is, how much of the Universe we can actually see and how far away the cosmic microwave background radiation is. But how many of us can honestly say we know the answers? And, even if we know the answers, how are we going to respond to the…
Descriptors: Radiation, Mathematics, Mathematical Formulas, Astronomy
Camino, Nestor; Gangui, Alejandro – Physics Teacher, 2012
It is well known that the length and orientation of a shadow cast by a vertical gnomon depends on the time of the day and on the season of the year. But it also depends on the latitude of the site of observation. During the equinoxes, the temporal sequence of the shadows cast by each of the points that form any object follows a straight line from…
Descriptors: Science Education, Computation, Measurement, Constructivism (Learning)
Couture, Gilles – European Journal of Physics, 2012
Building a Universe populated by stars identical to our Sun and taking into consideration the wave-particle duality of light, the biological limits of the human eye, the finite size of stars and the finiteness of our Universe, we conclude that the sky could very well be dark at night. Besides the human eye, the dominant parameter is the finite…
Descriptors: Astronomy, Light, Human Body, Logical Thinking

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