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Tsoi, Kwok-Ho – School Science Review, 2013
This study investigated the level of understanding among student teachers in differentiating lepidopterans. It adopted a constructive approach to promoting conceptual change in students on the issue of animal classification by generating cognitive conflict. Most of the students used inaccurate morphological traits for identification, such as wing…
Descriptors: Science Instruction, Scientific Concepts, Misconceptions, Student Teachers
Bradley, Jordana – ProQuest LLC, 2013
According to No Child Left Behind, teachers must consider alternative teaching strategies to improve student achievement. The use of a facility dog as an instructional enhancement is an innovative teaching approach that deserves further research. The theoretical framework for the study was human-animal bond theory, which postulates that…
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Case Studies, Animals, Educational Environment
Sezek, Fatih – Online Submission, 2013
This study examined the effectiveness of a new learning approach in teaching classification of invertebrate animals in biology courses. In this approach, we used an impersonal style: the subject jigsaw, which differs from the other jigsaws in that both course topics and student groups are divided. Students in Jigsaw group were divided into five…
Descriptors: Biology, Animals, Classification, Teaching Methods
Marek, Edmund A.; Parker, Chad A. – International Electronic Journal of Environmental Education, 2010
"Science is a process of discovering and exploring the natural world. Exploration occurs in the classroom, laboratory or in the field. As part of your science class, you will be doing many activities and investigations that will involve the use of various materials, equipment, and chemicals…" (NSTA, 2010). Safety is always of utmost…
Descriptors: Animals, Science Education, Laboratory Safety, Legal Problems
Eckert, Michael J.; Abraham, Wickliffe C. – Learning & Memory, 2010
A number of experimental paradigms use in vitro brain slices to test for changes in synaptic transmission and plasticity following a behavioral manipulation. For example, a number of previous studies have reported a variety of effects of environmental enrichment (EE) exposure on field potential responses in hippocampal slices, but in no study was…
Descriptors: Physiology, Brain Hemisphere Functions, Animals, Change
Johnson, Justin S.; Escobar, Martha; Kimble, Whitney L. – Learning & Memory, 2010
Short acquisition-extinction intervals (immediate extinction) can lead to either more or less spontaneous recovery than long acquisition-extinction intervals (delayed extinction). Using rat subjects, we observed less spontaneous recovery following immediate than delayed extinction (Experiment 1). However, this was the case only if a relatively…
Descriptors: Intervals, Learning Processes, Animals, Tests
Konishi, Masakazu – Brain and Language, 2010
Central nervous networks, be they a part of the human brain or a group of neurons in a snail, may be designed to produce distinct patterns of movement. Central pattern generators can account for the development and production of normal vocal signals without auditory feedback in non-songbirds. Songbirds need auditory feedback to develop and…
Descriptors: Animals, Auditory Perception, Feedback (Response), Acoustics
Riede, Tobias; Goller, Franz – Brain and Language, 2010
Song production in songbirds is a model system for studying learned vocal behavior. As in humans, bird phonation involves three main motor systems (respiration, vocal organ and vocal tract). The avian respiratory mechanism uses pressure regulation in air sacs to ventilate a rigid lung. In songbirds sound is generated with two independently…
Descriptors: Singing, Vowels, Anatomy, Acoustics
Knudsen, Daniel; Thompson, Jason V.; Gentner, Timothy Q. – Learning and Motivation, 2010
Individual vocal recognition behaviors in songbirds provide an excellent framework for the investigation of comparative psychological and neurobiological mechanisms that support the perception and cognition of complex acoustic communication signals. To this end, the complex songs of European starlings have been studied extensively. Yet, several…
Descriptors: Singing, Operant Conditioning, Acoustics, Animals
Wright, Anthony A.; Lickteig, Mark T. – Learning and Motivation, 2010
Two matching-to-sample (MTS) and four same/different (S/D) experiments employed tests to distinguish between item-specific learning and relational learning. One MTS experiment showed item-specific learning when concept learning failed (i.e., no novel-stimulus transfer). Another MTS experiment showed item-specific learning when pigeons'…
Descriptors: Learning, Novelty (Stimulus Dimension), Stimuli, Transfer of Training
Walkup, Nancy – SchoolArts: The Art Education Magazine for Teachers, 2010
The author's school is fortunate to have two therapy dogs, Daisy and Rosie, both West Highland terriers (Westies). Daisy is such a comfort to students when they are sad, scared, or just in need of a quiet friend. She assists students with special needs as well as students whose needs are special. In this article, the author describes how she…
Descriptors: Animals, Portraiture, Freehand Drawing, Studio Art
Poling, Alan; Weetjens, Bart J.; Cox, Christophe; Beyene, Negussie W.; Sully, Andrew – Psychological Record, 2010
Within the past decade, giant pouched rats have been used successfully to detect landmines. This manuscript summarizes how these rats are trained and used operationally. The information provided is intended to be of practical value toward strengthening best practices in using "Cricetomys" for humanitarian purposes while simultaneously…
Descriptors: Animals, Social Values, Safety, Training
What's Culture Got to Do with It? Educational Research as a Necessarily Interdisciplinary Enterprise
Cole, Michael – Educational Researcher, 2010
The author examines the role of culture in education in historical perspective to suggest the conditions required to promote generalized educational reform. Although deliberate instruction appears to be a ubiquitous characteristic of human beings, schools arise only when large numbers of people begin to live in close proximity, using technologies…
Descriptors: Educational Research, Educational Change, Animals, Evaluation
Nagasaka, Yasuo; Brooks, Daniel I.; Wasserman, Edward A. – Learning and Motivation, 2010
We trained two bonobos to discriminate among occluded, complete, and incomplete stimuli. The occluded stimulus comprised a pair of colored shapes, one of which appeared to occlude the other. The complete and incomplete stimuli involved the single shape that appeared to have been partially covered in the occluded stimulus; the complete stimulus…
Descriptors: Stimuli, Animals, Training, Error Patterns
Braaten, Richard F. – Learning and Motivation, 2010
Male zebra finches learn to sing songs that they hear between 25 and 65 days of age, the sensitive period for song learning. In this experiment, male and female zebra finches were exposed to zebra finch songs either before (n = 9) or during (n = 4) the sensitive period. Following song exposure, recognition memory for the songs was assessed with an…
Descriptors: Singing, Recognition (Psychology), Experiments, Memory

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