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Peer reviewedBaker, Thomas R. – Science Teacher, 2001
Introduces the Global Positioning System (GPS) and explains its use in the science classroom. (YDS)
Descriptors: Biology, Environmental Education, Inquiry, Population Distribution
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
Peer reviewedFrench, Donald P.; Russell, Connie P. – Journal of College Science Teaching, 2001
Claims that one way to avoid the problems of high enrollment and minimal student-instructor interaction is to use lecture facilitators. Not only can facilitators help with group work, operate classroom technology, and perform demonstrations, facilitators can put into practice inquiry-based techniques. (Author/MM)
Descriptors: Higher Education, Inquiry, Science Instruction, Teaching Methods
Peer reviewedJackson, Julia A.; Zokaites, Carol; Smith, Michael J.; Crum, Emily; Callahan, Caitlin – Science Scope, 2001
Explains how a karst is formed in the U.S. and introduces an activity in which students explore the fragile environment of a karst and study the interactions between human population and the earth system. (YDS)
Descriptors: Earth Science, Geology, Groundwater, Inquiry
Bull, Glen – Learning & Leading with Technology, 2005
The following three articles in the Learning Connections section (pp. 45?55) consider how technology might be used to facilitate whole-class inquiry in science, mathematics, and social studies classrooms. These illustrative examples are intended tol stimulate thought and discussion among teachers, technology coordinators, and school leaders about…
Descriptors: Science Instruction, Inquiry, Educational Technology, Mathematics Instruction
Hansen, David T. – Educational Theory, 2004
In this article, I elucidate the idea of a poetics of teaching and outline its value to scholars and teachers who seek a deeper understanding of the practice. A poetics of teaching draws together aesthetic, intellectual, and moral dimensions of the work that are often treated separately, if treated at all, in both research and in the classroom. In…
Descriptors: Aesthetics, Intellectual Disciplines, Teaching Methods, Teaching (Occupation)
Fulton, Lori; Campbell, Brian – Science and Children, 2004
Science notebooks are fixtures in many science classrooms, but are students using them to their full potential? Ideally, science notebooks should be tools for students to grapple with scientific concepts and make sense of their understandings using recording and organizing strategies that are personally meaningful. Many times, however, students…
Descriptors: Student Journals, Journal Writing, Science Education, Teaching Methods
Timmons, Maryellen – Science Scope, 2004
Fish dissections are a great way to introduce the concepts of food webs, predator-prey relationships, and ecosystems, but these labs are expensive, messy, smelly, and require a lot of supervision because of the tools involved. The author has developed an inexpensive, safe, and clean alternative where students "dissect" simulated fish…
Descriptors: Animals, Ecology, Science Instruction, Teaching Methods
Quintana, Chris; Zhang, Meilan; Krajcik, Joseph – Educational Psychologist, 2005
Major educational policy groups call on learners to engage in inquiry-based activities. With a growing amount of information now available online, there is an increased focus on online inquiry where learners ask research questions; search digital libraries and other information sources; and read, assess, and synthesize that information.…
Descriptors: Computer Software, Metacognition, Inquiry, Scaffolding (Teaching Technique)
Muukkonen, Hanni; Lakkala, Minna; Hakkarainen, Kai – Journal of the Learning Sciences, 2005
In higher education, there is a challenge to gain the full benefit of the potentials of learning technology for collaborative knowledge advancement and for scaffolding practices of academic literacy and scientific argumentation. The technology, ideally, would be used to provide support that enables students to deal with more demanding tasks than…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Tutoring, Educational Technology, Computer Assisted Instruction
Cartier, Jennifer L.; Stewart, Jim; Zoellner, Brian – American Biology Teacher, 2006
In this article, the authors discuss their belief in organizing curricula around sets of causal models in order to provide students with opportunities not only to learn about the subject matter of particular disciplines, but also about how scientific knowledge is generated and justified. They describe a nine-week genetics course for high school…
Descriptors: Causal Models, Curriculum Development, Genetics, Science Education
Starratt, Robert J. – Educational Administration Quarterly, 2004
Reflecting on Bill Foster's influence on the author's work leads to reflections about the lifelong dialogue among scholars whose thinking and writing is continually refreshed and deepened by a scholarly field of dialogue. Over time, a dialogue between two scholars illuminates earlier scholarly influences on each of them, leading to the enrichment…
Descriptors: Scholarship, Knowledge Level, Developmental Continuity, Inquiry
Nering, Marguerite – Philosophy of Music Education Review, 2004
This article presents a response to Kingsley Price's argument on the seemingness of the emotionality of music. For Price, music is not a person, cannot possibly harbor an inward life, and cannot possibly be emotional. He argues that since music is not personal, it cannot be emotional but can only seem emotional. He then sets out to discover how…
Descriptors: Music, Psychological Patterns, Affective Behavior, Music Education
Clandinin, D. Jean; Raymond, Heather – Equity & Excellence in Education, 2006
We outline a theoretical view of narrative inquiry as both phenomenon and method, and we explore the growth and development of narrative inquiry in the field of education. Drawing on research with participants labeled as developmentally disabled, we show how narrative inquiry can illuminate how disability is understood and lived out in social,…
Descriptors: Personal Narratives, Inquiry, Developmental Disabilities, Research Methodology
Marten, Suzanne; Spielman, Jane – Language Arts, 2005
An examination of how the use of descriptive analysis of children's work such as the Modified Descriptive Review process supported professional inquiry and growth for educators and for children they serve, is presented. The Modified Descriptive Review process fed immediate actions as well as the posing and exploring of large questions about…
Descriptors: Inquiry, Faculty Development, Teacher Improvement, Reflective Teaching

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