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van Zee, Emily H.; Jansen, Henri; Winograd, Kenneth; Crowl, Michele; Devitt, Adam – Journal of Science Teacher Education, 2013
The ability to listen closely, speak clearly, write coherently, read with comprehension, and to create and critique media offerings in science contexts is essential for effective science teaching. How might instructors develop such abilities in a physics course for prospective elementary and middle school teachers? We describe here such a course,…
Descriptors: Physics, Student Teacher Attitudes, Literacy Education, Teaching Methods
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Ritchie, Stephen M.; Tobin, Kenneth; Sandhu, Maryam; Sandhu, Satwant; Henderson, Senka; Roth, Wolff-Michael – Journal of Research in Science Teaching, 2013
Teachers often have difficulty implementing inquiry-based activities, leading to the arousal of negative emotions. In this multicase study of beginning physics teachers in Australia, we were interested in the extent to which their expectations were realized and how their classroom experiences while implementing extended experimental investigations…
Descriptors: Physics, Emotional Response, Inquiry, Case Studies
Hermanowicz, Joseph C. – University of Chicago Press, 2009
What can we learn when we follow people over the years and across the course of their professional lives? Joseph C. Hermanowicz asks this question specifically about scientists and answers it here by tracking fifty-five physicists through different stages of their careers at a variety of universities across the country. He explores these…
Descriptors: Scientists, College Faculty, Science Careers, Physics
Bogle, Stephanie Nicole – ProQuest LLC, 2009
Fluctuation electron microscopy (FEM) has been used to study the nanoscale order in various amorphous materials. The method is explicitly sensitive to 3- and 4-body atomic correlation functions in amorphous materials; this is sufficient to establish the existence of structural order on the nanoscale, even when the radial distribution function…
Descriptors: Laboratory Equipment, Statistical Analysis, Simulation, Laboratory Experiments
King, Travis L. – ProQuest LLC, 2009
The incorporation of nanofluidic elements between microfluidic channels to form hybrid microfluidic/nanofluidic architectures allows the extension of microfluidic systems into the third dimension, thus removing the constraints imposed by planarity. Measuring and understanding the behavior of these devices creates new analytical challenges due to…
Descriptors: Laboratory Equipment, Genetics, Manufacturing, Measurement Techniques
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Piva, M. – Physics Teacher, 2009
In introductory-level physics courses, the concept of surface tension is often illustrated using the example of capillary rise in thin tubes. In this paper the author describes experiments conducted using a planar geometry created with two small plates forming a thin wedge. The distribution of the fluid entering the wedge can be studied as a…
Descriptors: Physics, Science Instruction, Scientific Principles, Scientific Concepts
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Greenslade, Thomas B., Jr. – Physics Teacher, 2009
This is a story about a book that I found in my collection, its author, and the boy who owned it. The book is "The Boy's Playbook of Science", first published in 1860 by John Henry Pepper (1821-1900). On the flyleaf is written "Arthur G. Webster; Christmas/75; from Mama." Arthur Gordon Webster (1863-1923) was one of the founders of the American…
Descriptors: Science Education, Physics, Science Activities, Science Experiments
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Ucke, C.; Schlichting, H-J. – Physics Education, 2009
Snap discs made of bimetal have many technical applications as thermostats. Jumping discs are a toy version of such snap discs. Besides giving technical information, we describe physical investigations. We show especially how, through simple measurements and calculations, you can determine the initial speed ([approximately equal to]3.5 m…
Descriptors: Investigations, Physics, Experiments, Climate
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Aguilar, Horacio Munguia; Aguilar, Francisco Armenta – Physics Education, 2009
It is shown how the load cell from a junk electronic balance can be used as a force transducer for physics experiments. Recovering this device is not only an inexpensive way of getting a valuable laboratory tool but also very useful didactic work on electronic instrumentation. Some experiments on mechanics with this transducer are possible after a…
Descriptors: Mechanics (Physics), Science Instruction, Science Experiments, Laboratory Equipment
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Bryan, J. A.; Slough, S. W. – Physics Education, 2009
While computer technology continues to enhance the teaching and learning of all science disciplines, computer simulations, in particular, have become exceptionally beneficial in physics education. In addition to the manner in which physics instructors integrate computer simulations into their instructional practices, the design of a simulation may…
Descriptors: Physics, Prediction, Computers, Teaching Methods
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Baune, S. – Physics Education, 2009
We analyse the motion of a spot of light projected onto a flat screen by a rotating source. We find that the motion of the spot has many interesting features such as spot splitting and superluminal effects. Our discussion is well suited for undergraduates and can be an interesting add-on in their curriculum, giving them new insights into the…
Descriptors: Motion, Undergraduate Students, Higher Education, Equations (Mathematics)
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Griffin, Elizabeth – Physics Teacher, 2009
"Ozone" is a sensitive topic that arouses interest everywhere. Its presence in the stratosphere affects us all, and its threatened reduction would have such dire consequences that it energizes international campaigns, influences the thinking of governments, and activates substantial alterations in the accustomed habits of millions throughout the…
Descriptors: Physics, Science Education, Science Instruction, Astronomy
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Farhadi, Maryam; Azadi, Pooya; Zarinpanjeh, Nima – Chemical Engineering Education, 2009
In this study, performance of a hydrogen-peroxide-driven car has been simulated using basic conservation laws and a few numbers of auxiliary equations. A numerical method was implemented to solve sets of highly non-linear ordinary differential equations. Transient pressure and the corresponding traveled distance for three different car weights are…
Descriptors: Motor Vehicles, Equations (Mathematics), Calculus, Performance
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Keeports, David – Physics Teacher, 2009
In problems dealing with the Earth's gravity, students are frequently bewildered by the fact that the two common expressions for potential energy, "mgh" and "-Gm[subscript e]m/r", differ in sign and differ considerably in form. Some textbooks demonstrate that the more familiar first expression is a special case of the more general second equation…
Descriptors: Science Instruction, Textbooks, Equations (Mathematics), Physics
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Mungan, Carl E. – Physics Teacher, 2009
Rayleigh's criterion states that a pair of point sources are barely resolved by an optical instrument when the central maximum of the diffraction pattern due to one source coincides with the first minimum of the pattern of the other source. As derived in standard introductory physics textbooks, the first minimum for a rectangular slit of width "a"…
Descriptors: Optics, Physics, Science Instruction, Textbooks
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