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Neighbors, Clayton; Larimer, Mary E.; Lewis, Melissa A. – Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology, 2004
The authors evaluated the efficacy of a computer-delivered personalized normative feedback intervention in reducing alcohol consumption among heavy-drinking college students. Participants included 252 students who were randomly assigned to an intervention or control group following a baseline assessment. Immediately after completing measures of…
Descriptors: Intervention, Norms, Feedback, Alcohol Abuse
Chiappetta, Eugene L.; Koballa, Thomas R., Jr. – Science Teacher, 2004
While an impressive body of content knowledge is associated with science courses, there is more about the scientific enterprise itself that students should learn. In addition to viewing science as a body of knowledge, students should also view science as a way of thinking and investigating and should have an understanding of how science interacts…
Descriptors: Scientific Principles, Scientific Enterprise, Science Education, Misconceptions
Sheldon, Jane P. – Teaching of Psychology, 2002
Psychology instructors and textbook authors rate operant conditioning as one of the most essential concepts for students to learn, yet textbook writers, as well as students, can fall prey to misconceptions. This study is a content analysis of the presentation of operant conditioning in introductory psychology textbooks and their companion Web…
Descriptors: Textbooks, Misconceptions, Information Sources, Operant Conditioning

Orvis, Jessica N.; Orvis, Jeffrey A. – Journal of College Science Teaching, 2005
Active engagement in the classroom is one of the best tools available for overcoming conceptual difficulties. Science educators agree that students of all ages learn more by participating actively in the interpretation of scientific phenomena (NAS 2003; NSF 1998). In this article, the authors describe demonstrations in class using paper wads as an…
Descriptors: Chemistry, Science Instruction, Demonstrations (Educational), Active Learning
Gopal, Hemant; Kleinsmidt, Jacques; Case, Jennifer; Musonge, Paul – International Journal of Science Education, 2004
Based on a purposive sample of 15 second-year chemical engineering students, this study investigates students' conceptions of evaporation, condensation and vapour pressure. During individual interviews the students were questioned on three tasks that had been designed around these topics. Qualitative analysis of student responses showed a range of…
Descriptors: Misconceptions, Chemical Engineering, Engineering Education, College Students
Moreno, Roxana; Mayer, Richard E. – Journal of Educational Psychology, 2005
The authors investigated whether guidance and reflection would facilitate science learning in an interactive multimedia game. College students learned how to design plants to survive in different weather conditions. In Experiment 1, they learned with an agent that either guided them with corrective and explanatory feedback or corrective feedback…
Descriptors: Misconceptions, Guidance, Weather, Feedback
Forret, Joan – Journal of Technology Studies, 2004
A general theme of technology education posits that participation in technology studies will result in outcomes and benefits for the wider society. Such an expectation is reflected in the New Zealand Technology Curriculum document where the aim of technology education includes enabling students "to achieve technological literacy through the…
Descriptors: Judges, Opinions, Social Structure, Court Litigation
Moody, Johnette – Quarterly Review of Distance Education, 2004
Distance education is being hailed as the next best thing to sliced bread. But is it really? Many problems exist with distance-delivered courses. Everything from course development and management to the student not being adequately prepared are problematic and result in high attrition rates in distance-delivered courses. Students initially…
Descriptors: Distance Education, Prior Learning, Academic Persistence, Online Courses
Wilt, John R. – Journal of Curriculum and Supervision, 2005
The traditional order in which science courses are taught in U.S. high schools is biology, chemistry, physics. The physics course usually is regarded as very difficult because it requires both high-level mathematical skills and high-level thinking skills; it is taught in the final year of high school to provide time for students to develop the…
Descriptors: Physics, Science Education, Grade 9, Mathematics Skills
Audet, Richard H. – Science Scope, 2005
With such curriculum gaps, it is hardly surprising that middle school children's understanding of botany is limited and riddled with misconceptions. Knowing that plants supply the oxygen to sustain most life forms and provide the primary energy source of most food webs is a core idea of science. Investigating non-native species is one way to…
Descriptors: Middle School Students, Misconceptions, Learning Processes, Educational Resources
Tanner, Kimberly; Allen, Deborah – Cell Biology Education, 2005
Underpinning science education reform movements in the last 20 years--at all levels and within all disciplines--is an explicit shift in the goals of science teaching from students simply creating a knowledge base of scientific facts to students developing deeper understandings of major concepts within a scientific discipline. For example, what use…
Descriptors: Prior Learning, Biology, Educational Change, Science Education
Rankin, Carole E. – Journal of Offender Rehabilitation, 2005
This study reviews state and national surveys of prisoner literacy and compares their results to two recent surveys of literacy in Michigan prisoners. The persistent notion that prisoners are severely illiterate is shown to be a myth. In Michigan, only 10 to 11% of commitments were found to have Test of Adult Basic Education scores below grade…
Descriptors: Misconceptions, National Surveys, Illiteracy, Institutionalized Persons
Mulroy, David – Academic Questions, 2004
Of the seven liberal arts, on which Western education was based, grammar has always been preeminent. Yet English teachers in recent years have belittled it to the point of an irrelevance. Not only has this higher illiteracy rendered Americans unable to extract ideas from sophisticated prose, David Mulroy worries, but also it leaves us with the…
Descriptors: Grammar, Liberal Arts, Academic Achievement, Academic Standards
Pimbblet, Kevin A. – Physics Education, 2002
The model of the Big Bang is an integral part of the national curricula in England and Wales. Previous work (e.g. Baxter 1989) has shown that pupils often come into education with many and varied prior misconceptions emanating from both internal and external sources. Whilst virtually all of these misconceptions can be remedied, there will remain…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Misconceptions, National Curriculum, Educational Assessment
O'Grady, Kevin – British Journal of Religious Education, 2005
I reply to L. Philip Barnes' assessment of the contributions of Ninian Smart and phenomenology to religious education. My argument is that Barnes first misconceives and then underestimates Smart's legacy. I sketch Smart's relevance to some current issues in religious education, suggesting that his thought helps us to avoid potentially damaging…
Descriptors: Religion, Phenomenology, Religious Education, Misconceptions