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Peer reviewedHurd, Paul DeHart – Journal of Research in Science Teaching, 2002
Focuses on changes taking place in the teaching of science as part of general education. Contends that the new science curriculum should be focusing on the utilization of science technology for public welfare and human benefit. (Contains 33 references.) (Author/YDS)
Descriptors: Educational Change, Interdisciplinary Approach, Science Curriculum, Science Education
Peer reviewedWoolnough, Brian E. – Canadian Journal of Science, Mathematics and Technology Education, 2001
Stresses a different non-traditional model of science: the looseness of the knowledge held, the idiosyncratic methods by which it is obtained, and the personal way in which it is used to solve problems. Further stresses the importance of tacit knowledge and the affective driving force. Argues for the inclusion of authentic science in school…
Descriptors: Affective Objectives, Humanistic Education, Science Curriculum, Science Instruction
Peer reviewedStern, Luli; Roseman, Jo Ellen – Science Teacher, 2001
Aligns science curricula with the current benchmarks and standards. (Contains 45 references.) (YDS)
Descriptors: High Schools, Learning, Middle Schools, Science Curriculum
Peer reviewedBybee, Rodger W. – Bioscience, 2001
Discusses the place of the topic of evolution in high school biology curricula in history, new challenges and misconceptions about science, and the need for biology education. (Contains 20 references.) (YDS)
Descriptors: Biology, Evolution, Inquiry, Misconceptions
Goolkasian, Paula; Van Wallendael, Lori; Gaultney, Jane F. – Teaching of Psychology, 2003
A public Web site (Goolkasian & Van Wallendael, 2001), established to provide educational materials in cognitive science, served as the primary text for an interdisciplinary course. We tracked student use of the Web site online and with self-report questionnaires. A majority (74%) of the students rated the Web site to be as useful or more useful…
Descriptors: Science Curriculum, Student Reaction, Internet, Questionnaires
Peer reviewedGetzler, Yutan D. Y. L.; Schmidt, Joseph A. R.; Coates, Geoffrey W. – Journal of Chemical Education, 2005
A class of highly active, well-defined compounds for the catalytic carbonylation of epoxides and aziridines to beta-lactones and beta-lactams are introduced. The synthesis of one of the catalysts involves a simple imine condensation to form the ligand followed by air-sensitive metalation and salt metathesis steps.
Descriptors: Chemistry, Science Education, Advanced Students, Science Curriculum
Peer reviewedRummey, Jackie M.; Boyce, Mary C. – Journal of Chemical Education, 2004
An approach that is useful to any introductory nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopy course is developed. This approach to teaching NMR spectrometry includes spectral simulation along with the traditional elements of hands-on instrument use and structure elucidation to demonstrate the connection between simulating a spectrum and structure…
Descriptors: Teaching Methods, Science Instruction, Spectroscopy, Simulation
Tseitlin, Michael; Galili, Igal – Science & Education, 2006
This study considers the relationship between science, science teaching and the philosophy of science perceiving these three cultural phenomena as a semantic triad. This approach presents science teaching as being a form of a scientific reflection. The relationship of science teaching to the philosophy of science is advocated to be essential,…
Descriptors: Reflection, Science Teachers, Science Instruction, Science Curriculum
Anderson, Malcolm; McInnis, Craig; Hartley, Robyn – Tertiary Education and Management, 2003
In this paper, we compare employment outcomes of science graduates in Australia with information about survey respondents' courses of study to determine the nature and extent of employment-curriculum match (or mismatch). Outcomes of student preferences are also explored to see which course structures--specifically generalist or specialist--are…
Descriptors: Employment, Graduates, Foreign Countries, Science Teachers
Rogan, John M. – Science Education, 2007
The article grapples with the question of how much curriculum change is appropriate in a given context and in a given time frame. How can a balance be struck between stagnation, on the one hand, and the promotion of unrealistic innovation on the other? In answer to this dilemma, the concept of a zone of feasible innovation (ZFI) is proposed and…
Descriptors: Curriculum Development, Innovation, Developmental Psychology, Educational Change
Barreto, Jose C.; Dubetz, Terry A.; Schmidt, Diane L.; Isern, Sharon; Beatty, Thomas; Brown, David W.; Gillman, Edward; Alberte, Randall S.; Egiebor, Nosa O. – Journal of College Science Teaching, 2007
Core concepts can be integrated throughout lower-division science and engineering courses by using a series of related, cross-referenced laboratory experiments. Starting with butane combustion in chemistry, the authors expanded the underlying core concepts of energy transfer into laboratories designed for biology, physics, and engineering. This…
Descriptors: Laboratory Experiments, Laboratory Procedures, Scientific Concepts, Science Curriculum
Milne, Ian – Primary Science Review, 2007
The revamped New Zealand curriculum emphasises "scientific literacy for all students" and provides teachers with an opportunity to promote science as an integral element of the primary school curriculum. Exploring and explaining the natural world in primary science can provide authentic contexts for the development of knowledge, skills,…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Scientific Literacy, Thinking Skills, Science Curriculum
Kim, Byoung-Sug; McKinney, Mary – Science Scope, 2007
By virtue of its connection with scientific literacy, the nature of science has been considered essential subject matter for the science curriculum. With this in mind, seventh-grade students were introduced to three aspects of the nature of science: (1) the distinction between observation and inference, (2) the subjective, and (3) the tentative…
Descriptors: Scientific Principles, Scientific Literacy, Science Curriculum, Grade 7
Viterbo, Paula – Journal of Research Practice, 2007
Before 1950, history of science did not exist as an independent academic branch, but was instead pursued by practitioners across various humanities and scientific disciplines. After professionalization, traces of its prehistory as a cross-disciplinary area of interest bound to an interdisciplinary, educational philosophy have remained. This essay…
Descriptors: Educational Philosophy, Higher Education, College Science, Interdisciplinary Approach
Allen, Deborah; Tanner, Kimberly – CBE - Life Sciences Education, 2007
This article discusses a systematic approach to designing significant learning experiences, often referred to as the "backward design process," which has been popularized by Wiggins and McTighe (1998) and is included as a central feature of L. Dee Fink's model for integrated course design (Fink, 2003). The process is referred to as backward…
Descriptors: Units of Study, Instructional Design, Integrated Curriculum, Science Curriculum

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