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Geake, John – Education 3-13, 2004
The burgeoning interest over recent decades about the human brain, and possible implications for education, has, perhaps not surprisingly, fostered a suite of urban myths about brain functioning. The prize for the barmiest goes to the one about using only 10% of the brain, but there are plenty more that deserve dishonourable mention. The most…
Descriptors: Brain, Child Development, Brain Hemisphere Functions, Misconceptions
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Kaomea, Julie – Pedagogy, Culture and Society, 2006
"White men are saving brown women from brown men." Gayatri Spivak suggests that this phrase is for her as fundamental for an investigation of colonial dynamics as Freud's formulation "a child is being beaten" was for his inquiry into sexuality. Through a deconstructive interrogation of elementary Hawaiian history textbooks, Hawaiian studies…
Descriptors: Females, Hawaiians, Culture, History
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Stuewer, Roger H. – Science & Education, 2006
The capsule histories of physics that students learn in their physics courses stem basically, I believe, from a linear view of history--that physicists in making fundamental discoveries follow a Royal Road to them, as Hermann von Helmholtz put it in 1892. The actual routes they follow, however, are generally nonlinear, and when historians display…
Descriptors: Physics, Science History, Scientists, Experiments
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Sadek, Jawad; Euler, Russell – AMATYC Review, 2005
We find infinite series in calculus to be one of the most confusing topics our students encounter. In this note, we look at some issues that our students find difficult or ambiguous involving the Ratio Test, the Root Test, and also the Alternating Series Test. We offer some suggestions and some examples, which could be a supplement to the set of…
Descriptors: Calculus, Misconceptions, Mathematics Instruction, College Mathematics
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Roy, Michael M.; Christenfeld, Nicholas J. S.; McKenzie, Craig R. M. – Psychological Bulletin, 2005
People frequently underestimate how long it will take them to complete a task. The prevailing view is that during the prediction process, people incorrectly use their memories of how long similar tasks have taken in the past because they take an overly optimistic outlook. A variety of evidence is reviewed in this article that points to a…
Descriptors: Memory, Bias, Psychology, Prediction
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Siebert, Daniel; Gaskin, Nicole – Teaching Children Mathematics, 2006
For students to develop meaningful conceptions of fractions and fraction operations, they need to think of fractions in terms other than as just whole-number combinations. In this article, we suggest two powerful images for thinking about fractions that move beyond whole-number reasoning. (Contains 5 figures.)
Descriptors: Mathematics Instruction, Mathematical Concepts, Concept Formation, Misconceptions
Rathey, Allen – American School & University, 2006
Several companies are marketing maintenance equipment to education institutions on a "quiet platform," citing benefits such as a safer, more pleasant indoor environment and unobtrusive operations during day cleaning or operating hours. This is basically "sound advice" (no one likes noisy equipment), but some of the messages can be confusing and…
Descriptors: Pollution, Maintenance, Educational Environment, Acoustics
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Ross, Steven J. – Applied Linguistics, 2006
Paul Stapleton's (2006) critique of quantitative research brings to the surface some common interpretive problems arising when experimental and quasi-experimental research designs are compared. While Stapleton may be correct in pointing out the superiority of experimental research designs because they best eliminate the influence of extraneous…
Descriptors: Research Methodology, Criticism, Statistical Analysis, Research Design
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Locher, Julie L.; Bronstein, Janet; Robinson, Caroline O.; Williams, Charlotte; Ritchie, Christine S. – Gerontologist, 2006
Conducting research in the home setting with homebound older adults presents distinct ethical and practical challenges that require special consideration. This article describes the methodological issues that make studying homebound older adults especially vulnerable to therapeutic misconception and researcher role conflict and offers practical…
Descriptors: Ethics, Research, Homebound, Older Adults
Yang, Mikyeong – Asia Pacific Education Review, 2006
In spite of its prevalence and importance, questioning in education has been underestimated and misconceptualized. The major reason for this has been that most studies on questioning have been heavily dependent on the paradigm of positivism. The present study critiques the limitations of those studies on four specific issues: 1) the narrow…
Descriptors: Misconceptions, Educational Research, Questioning Techniques, Epistemology
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Garner, Charles M. – Journal of Chemical Education, 2005
A discovery-based experiment is developed depending on a "false assumption" that the students mistakenly assume they know the structure of a reaction product and are forced to reconcile observations that are inconsistent with this assumption. This experiment involves the chemistry of azulenes, an interesting class of intensely colored aromatic…
Descriptors: Chemistry, Heuristics, Discovery Processes, Misconceptions
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Eastwell, Peter – Science Education Review, 2007
Bernoulli's principle is being misunderstood and consequently misused. This paper clarifies the issues involved, hypothesises as to how this unfortunate situation has arisen, provides sound explanations for many everyday phenomena involving moving air, and makes associated recommendations for teaching the effects of moving fluids.
Descriptors: Misconceptions, Scientific Concepts, Scientific Principles, Demonstrations (Educational)
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Hare, Molly K.; Graber, Kim C. – High School Journal, 2007
Grounded within constructivist theory, the purpose of this investigation was to investigate knowledge acquisition and developing conceptions of high school-aged students during a unit of instruction in badminton. Six different qualitative methods were utilized: (a) observations, (b) formal interviews, (c) informal interviews, (d) think aloud…
Descriptors: Social Environment, Psychomotor Skills, Misconceptions, Learning Processes
Riley, Naomi Schaefer – Chronicle of Higher Education, 2007
College campuses provide lots of institutions that look like those one finds in a democratic society--newspapers, government, courts--but ultimately the campus versions are not the same. When anybody sign up for college, he/she is volunteering (and paying) to be part of a particular community with particular rules. This article discusses the…
Descriptors: Campuses, Democracy, Misconceptions, Democratic Values
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Qudrat-Ullah, Hassan – Simulation & Gaming, 2007
According to the hypothesis of misperception of feedback, people's poor performance in renewable resource management tasks can be attributed to their general tendency to systematically misperceive the dynamics of bioeconomic systems. The thesis of this article is that dynamic decision performance can be improved by helping individuals develop more…
Descriptors: Feedback (Response), Computer Simulation, Evaluation Criteria, Laboratory Experiments
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