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Nehm, Ross H.; Budd, Ann F. – American Biology Teacher, 2006
NMITA is a reef coral biodiversity database that we use to introduce students to the expansive realm of bioinformatics beyond genetics. We introduce a series of lessons that have students use this database, thereby accessing real data that can be used to test hypotheses about biodiversity and evolution while targeting the "National Science …
Descriptors: Biodiversity, Databases, Genetics, Science Activities
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Johansson, K. E.; Nilsson, Ch.; Wachtmeister, S. – Physics Education, 2007
With the radon measurement activities at Stockholm House of Science, nuclear and experimental physics is introduced in a way that attracts the attention and interest of the students. These projects give the students the opportunity to use mobile detectors, either in their school, in the House of Science or in their homes. During 2006, 34 radon…
Descriptors: Science Instruction, Nuclear Physics, Foreign Countries, Science Experiments
Hitt, Austin M.; Townsend, J. Scott – Science Educator, 2007
In this article the authors present an analogy, "Apple Activity," designed to help science teachers and students reflect upon science instruction and learning at the three conceptual levels of scientific understanding--macroscopic level, sub-microscopic/particle level, and symbolic level. Analogies are useful instructional tools that improve…
Descriptors: Logical Thinking, Science Activities, Science Instruction, Chemistry
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Cross, Rod – Physics Teacher, 2007
It is well-known that a party balloon can be made to fly erratically across a room, but it can also be used for quantitative measurements of other aspects of aerodynamics. Since a balloon is light and has a large surface area, even relatively weak aerodynamic forces can be readily demonstrated or measured in the classroom. Accurate measurements…
Descriptors: Science Activities, Scientific Concepts, Physics, Science Instruction
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Cavallo, Ann – Science and Children, 2007
It is important that students have the opportunity to experience the nature and processes of science for themselves. The sequence of activities presented in this paper--Draw-a-Scientist and the Mystery Box Redux--were designed to help students better understand the nature of science (NOS) and engage them in the process of scientific inquiry. These…
Descriptors: Scientific Principles, Scientists, Biology, Science Process Skills
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Brun, J. L. – European Journal of Physics, 2007
I find that students have difficulty with Hamilton's principle, at least the first time they come into contact with it, and therefore it is worth designing some examples to help students grasp its complex meaning. This paper supplies the simplest example to consolidate the learning of the quoted principle: that of a free particle moving along a…
Descriptors: Scientific Principles, Science Instruction, Science Activities, Physics
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Amir, Nazir; Subramaniam, R. – Physics Education, 2007
Students in the normal technical stream are generally less academically inclined. Teaching physics to them can be a challenge. A possible way to engage such kinaesthetic learners is to encourage them to fabricate physics-based toys. The activity described in this article shows how a group of three students were able to come up with a creative…
Descriptors: Physics, Science Instruction, Science Activities, Hands on Science
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Harman, Charles – Tech Directions, 2007
Electronics instructors and students find it very helpful to be able to check an operational amplifier at the proto-board stage. Most students lack the experience or knowledge that it takes to recognize whether an op-amp is operating normally or not. This article discusses a handy op-amp checker that allows one to check and/or test op-amps at the…
Descriptors: Electronics, Science Activities, Manufacturing Industry, Electrical Occupations
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Smith, Zach – Science Teacher, 2007
The hydrologic cycle is a very basic scientific principle. In this article, background information is presented on how the hydrologic cycle provides scientists with clues to understanding the history of Earth's climate. Also detailed is a web-based activity that allows students to learn about how scientists are able to piece together a record of…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Scientific Principles, Scientists, Climate
Donnelly, Laura – Teacher Magazine, 2007
When teaching science to kids, a visual approach is good. Humor is also good. And blowing things up is really, really good. At least that is what educators at the Exploratorium in San Francisco have found in the nine years since the museum began producing a live, off-the-cuff competition called Iron Science Teacher. Modeled after the Japanese cult…
Descriptors: Competition, Science Teachers, Museums, Science Instruction
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Murphy, Peter M. – Journal of Chemical Education, 2007
A concise, well-organized table of the boiling points of 392 organic compounds has facilitated inquiry-based instruction in multiple scientific principles. Many individual or group learning activities can be derived from the tabulated data of molecular structure and boiling point based on the instructor's education objectives and the students'…
Descriptors: Teaching Methods, Scientific Principles, Molecular Structure, Organic Chemistry
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Kamela, Martin – Physics Education, 2007
When students begin the study of Newton's laws they are generally comfortable with static equilibrium type problems, but dynamic examples where forces are not constant are more challenging. The class exercise presented here helps students to develop an intuitive grasp of both the position-velocity-acceleration relation and the force-acceleration…
Descriptors: Energy, Physics, Scientific Concepts, Science Instruction
Finson, Kevin D.; Ormsbee, Christine K.; Jensen, Mary M. – Corwin, 2011
Teachers are required to provide appropriate science instruction to all students, including children with special needs. However, educators are often left on their own to figure out how to effectively differentiate lessons and activities. This timely, practical guidebook shows general and special educators how to retool science activities and…
Descriptors: Science Activities, Pervasive Developmental Disorders, Academic Achievement, Teacher Collaboration
Macy, Michelle – ProQuest LLC, 2011
Within the paradigm of Sociocultural Theory, and using Activity Theory as a data-gathering and management tool, this microgenetic case study examined the processes--the growth, change, and development--engaged in by student-teachers in a foreign language education program as they worked together to complete an activity. The activity involved…
Descriptors: Evidence, Video Technology, Preservice Teacher Education, Preservice Teachers
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Redmond, Adrienne; Thomas, Julie; High, Karen; Scott, Margaret; Jordan, Pat; Dockers, Jean – School Science and Mathematics, 2011
This case study reviewed the collaborative efforts of university engineers, teacher educators, and middle school teachers to advance sixth- and seventh-grade students' learning through a series of project-based engineering activities. This two-year project enriched regular school curricula by introducing real-world applications of science and…
Descriptors: Engineering Education, Mentors, Problem Based Learning, Teaching Methods
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