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Llusa, Marcos; Muzzio, Fernando – Chemical Engineering Education, 2008
This article describes a hands-on educational activity designed to introduce students (or industrial employees) in the pharmaceutical arena to some of the most common problems in the mixing of solids: Active Pharmaceutical Ingredient (API) and lubricant (i.e. magnesium stearate) homogenization, characterization of segregation tendencies, and…
Descriptors: Learning Activities, Chemistry, Pharmaceutical Education, College Faculty
Heckscher, Mary – Science and Children, 2008
Many recipes for elementary science activities suggest making carbon dioxide from baking soda and vinegar; however, they often do not give exact measurements of the ingredients. The author was able to turn this "drawback" into a plus by challenging her fifth-grade students to find the "ultimate fizz"--i.,e., "What amount of baking soda added to a…
Descriptors: Elementary School Science, Science Activities, Grade 5, Hands on Science
Young, Timothy; Guy, Mark – Science and Children, 2008
In this article, the authors present a new way of teaching the phases of the Moon. Through the introduction of a "self shadow" (an idea of a shadow that is not well-known), they illuminate students' understanding of the phases of the Moon and help them understand the distinction between the shadows that cause eclipses and the shadows that relate…
Descriptors: Astronomy, Science Instruction, Teaching Methods, Learning Activities
Kennedy, Cathleen; Long, Kathy; Camins, Arthur – Science and Children, 2009
Teachers often rely on student questions, their observations of students at work, and their own intuition to monitor how well students are learning. However, the authors found that teachers learn more about their students when they use the four-step Reflective Assessment Technique that draws on guided teacher reflections to inform classroom…
Descriptors: Reflective Teaching, Control Groups, Science Curriculum, Scores
Bouwma-Gearhart, Jana; Stewart, James; Brown, Keffrelyn – International Journal of Science Education, 2009
Understanding the particulate nature of matter (PNM) is vital for participating in many areas of science. We assessed 11 students' atomic/molecular-level explanations of real-world phenomena after their participation in a modelling-based PNM unit. All 11 students offered a scientifically acceptable model regarding atomic/molecular behaviour in…
Descriptors: Science Activities, Causal Models, Heat, Science Instruction
Blanchard, Margaret; Sharp, Jennifer; Grable, Lisa – Science Teacher, 2009
As part of the "Car Lab Project," students constructed rubber band cars, raced them, and worked through a number of automotive activities. The students engaged in this project certainly had fun, but they also used high-tech gear such as motion sensors and graphing calculators to gather data on the distance and time cars traveled and to generate…
Descriptors: National Standards, Engines, Graphing Calculators, Mathematics Instruction
Bernard, Robin – 1996
This kit was created to make learning about bears a fun and meaningful experience for teachers and students. It offers students opportunities to learn about favorite animals through an assortment of fun activities filled with information. The activities interact with science, language arts, critical thinking, music, social studies, math, art, and…
Descriptors: Animals, Primary Education, Science Activities
Markle, Sandra – Instructor, 1987
A learning unit about earthquakes includes activities for primary grade students, including making inferences and defining operationally. Task cards are included for independent study on earthquake maps and earthquake measuring. (CB)
Descriptors: Earthquakes, Elementary Education, Science Activities
Peer reviewedZajac, David J.; Weissler, Mark C. – Journal of Speech, Language, and Hearing Research, 2004
Two studies were conducted to evaluate short-latency vocal tract air pressure responses to sudden pressure bleeds during production of voiceless bilabial stop consonants. It was hypothesized that the occurrence of respiratory reflexes would be indicated by distinct patterns of responses as a function of bleed magnitude. In Study 1, 19 adults…
Descriptors: Syllables, Speech, Anatomy, Science Activities
Tolman, Marvin – Science and Children, 2005
Students love outdoor activities and will love them even more when they build confidence in their tree identification and measurement skills. Through these activities, students will learn to identify the major characteristics of trees and discover how the pace--a nonstandard measuring unit--can be used to estimate not only distances but also the…
Descriptors: Science Activities, Investigations, Plants (Botany)
Damonte, Kathleen – Science and Children, 2004
Water is very important to plants. Plants need water to produce food and grow. Plants make their own food through a complex, sunlight-powered process called photosynthesis. Simply put, in photosynthesis, water absorbed by a plant's roots and carbon dioxide taken from the air by a plant's leaves combine to make the plant's food. This article…
Descriptors: Plants (Botany), Water, Science Activities
Damonte, Kathleen – Science and Children, 2004
Most people have probably heard the tale about the Moon being made out of Swiss cheese because, on Earth, the Moon looks like it is full of holes. Those holes are actually impact craters, circular depressions that formed when objects, such as rocks that orbit the Sun, smashed into the surface of the Moon. The activity described in this article,…
Descriptors: Astronomy, Science Activities, Lunar Research
Riddle, Bob – Science Scope, 2005
As students continue their monthly plotting of the planets along the ecliptic they should start to notice differences between inner and outer planet orbital motions, and their relative position or separation from the Sun. Both inner and outer planets have direct eastward motion, as well as retrograde motion. Inner planets Mercury and Venus,…
Descriptors: Science Education, Science Activities, Astronomy
Sharma, Loretta; Desai, Ankur; Sharma, Ajit – Biochemistry and Molecular Biology Education, 2006
A thin layer chromatography experiment of medical importance is described. The experiment involves extraction of lipids from simulated amniotic fluid samples followed by separation, detection, and scanning of the lecithin and sphingomyelin bands on TLC plates. The lecithin-to-sphingomyelin ratio is calculated. The clinical significance of this…
Descriptors: Laboratory Experiments, Science Activities, Chemistry
Hand, Richard – Science Scope, 2005
Is important for students to understand that numbers in science often involve measurements and that measurements have limited precision. The two activities described in this article demonstrate the limitations of measurement tools and explore the varying degrees of precision associated with the tools. Teachers should expect students to read…
Descriptors: Measurement, Measurement Equipment, Science Activities

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