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Soylu, Firat; Holbert, Nathan; Brady, Corey; Wilensky, Uri – Journal of Interactive Learning Research, 2017
In this paper we present a learning design approach that leverages perspective-taking to help students learn about complex systems. We define perspective-taking as projecting one's identity onto external entities (both animate and inanimate) in an effort to predict and anticipate events based on ecological cues, to automatically sense the…
Descriptors: Perspective Taking, Instructional Design, Learning Processes, Systems Approach
Matsumoto, Paul S.; Cao, Jiankang – Journal of Chemical Education, 2017
Computational thinking is a component of the Science and Engineering Practices in the Next Generation Science Standards, which were adopted by some states. We describe the activities in a high school chemistry course that may develop students' computational thinking skills by primarily using Excel, a widely available spreadsheet software. These…
Descriptors: Secondary School Science, High School Students, Computation, Thinking Skills
Benacka, Jan – Physics Education, 2017
This paper gives an account of an experiment in which thirty-three high school students of ages 17-19 developed spreadsheet numerical models of satellite and space probe motion. The models are free to download. A survey was carried out to find out the students' opinion of the lessons.
Descriptors: Science Instruction, High Schools, Secondary School Science, Physics
Musik, Panjit – Turkish Online Journal of Educational Technology - TOJET, 2017
The development of computer-based experiment set has become necessary in teaching physics in schools so that students can learn from their real experiences. The purpose of this study is to create and to develop the computer-based experiment set on simple harmonic motion of mass on springs for teaching and learning physics. The average period of…
Descriptors: Science Experiments, Physics, Scientific Concepts, Motion
Black, Andy Nicholas; Magruder, Robert H. – Physics Teacher, 2017
Learning and understanding physics requires more than studying physics texts. It requires doing physics. Doing research is a key opportunity for students to connect physical principles with their everyday experience. A powerful way to introduce students to research and technique is through subjects in which they might find interest. Presented is…
Descriptors: Physics, Introductory Courses, Acoustics, Scientific Research
Johnson, Sadie M.; Javner, Cassidy; Hackel, Benjamin J. – Journal of Chemical Education, 2017
The goal of this study was to create an accessible, inexpensive, and engaging experiment to teach high school and undergraduate chemistry or biology students about intermolecular forces and how they contribute to the behavior of biomolecules. We developed an enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) to probe specific structure-function…
Descriptors: High School Students, Undergraduate Students, Chemistry, Molecular Biology
Williams, Dylan P.; Hin, Shane Lo Fan – New Directions in the Teaching of Physical Sciences, 2017
Year-one chemistry students at two different institutions were asked to rate the importance of a series of discipline-specific, transferable and laboratory skills by responding to a series of Likert-type questions. The students at both institutions had studied similar curricula but had different levels of experience of the Context and Problem…
Descriptors: Problem Based Learning, Student Attitudes, Transfer of Training, Job Skills
Hwoe-gwan Yang; Jongwon Park – Journal of Baltic Science Education, 2017
Even though experimental design (ED) in open inquiry is important for more authentic scientific inquiry, it is not easy for students. The objective of this research was to identify factors considered important in students' ED and explore how to utilize it to improve students' ED. To achieve the objective, in the first step, eighteen middle-school…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Middle School Students, Secondary School Science, Science Process Skills
Basso, A.; Chiorri, C.; Bracco, F.; Carnasciali, M. M.; Alloisio, M.; Grotti, M. – Chemistry Education Research and Practice, 2018
Improving the interest of high-school students towards chemistry (and science in general) is one of the goals of the Italian Ministry of Education. To this aim, we designed a context-based activity that actively involved students in six different laboratory experiences interconnected by a case study of the murder of Miss Scarlet, from the famous…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, High School Students, Secondary School Science, Chemistry
Gülçiçek, Çaglar; Kizilcik, Hasan Sahin; Damli, Volkan – Physics Education, 2018
The purpose of this research is to determine the effects of different laboratory approaches on students' understanding of wave concepts. For this purpose, three experiments and experiment instructions have been designed for each of the three approaches (verification, hypothesis testing, and the 5E laboratory approach). Quantitative aspects of the…
Descriptors: Science Instruction, Scientific Concepts, Concept Formation, Science Laboratories
Lieberherr, Martin – Physics Teacher, 2013
Every instructor should know some easy examples of anharmonic oscillations. The rocking of an empty wine bottle or a slender beer glass is one of those: The angle is not a sinusoidal function of time and the period is not independent of the amplitude, not even for small amplitudes. But care has to be taken that the glass does not slip or rotate…
Descriptors: Science Instruction, Physics, Scientific Concepts, Motion
Miles, Deon T. – Journal of Chemical Education, 2013
Electrochemistry is a significant area of analytical chemistry encompassing electrical measurements of chemical systems. The applications associated with electrochemistry appear in many aspects of everyday life: explaining how batteries work, how the human nervous system functions, and how metal corrosion occurs. The most common electrochemical…
Descriptors: Mnemonics, Chemistry, Science Instruction, College Science
Wood, Deborah; Sebranek, John – Physics Teacher, 2013
In April 1820, Hans Christian Ørsted noticed that the needle of a nearby compass deflected briefly from magnetic north each time the electric current of the battery he was using for an unrelated experiment was turned on or off. Upon further investigation, he showed that an electric current flowing through a wire produces a magnetic field. In 1831…
Descriptors: Magnets, Electronics, Science Experiments, Science Instruction
Vollmer, Michael; Mollmann, Klaus-Peter – Physics Teacher, 2013
In nature, water drops can have a large variety of sizes and shapes. Small droplets with diameters of the order of 5 to 10 µm are present in fog and clouds. This is not sufficiently large for gravity to dominate their behavior. In contrast, raindrops typically have sizes of the order of 1 mm, with observed maximum sizes in nature of around 5 mm in…
Descriptors: Science Instruction, Water, Science Experiments, Physics
Blumenthal, Jack; Bradvica, Rafaela; Karl, Katherine – Physics Teacher, 2013
In a recent paper, Zable described an experiment with a near-spherical balloon filled with impure helium. Measuring the temperature and the pressure inside and outside the balloon, the lift of the balloon, and the mass of the balloon materials, he described how to use the ideal gas laws and Archimedes' principal to compute the average molecular…
Descriptors: Scientific Concepts, Physics, Accuracy, Measurement

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