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Harakas, George N. – Journal of Chemical Education, 2018
This work describes an effective, low cost method to anodize small aluminum objects. The use of a PVC spacer between the anode and cathode significantly reduces the size of the electrochemical cell and electrolyte required for its operation. Students will explore the physical and chemical properties of aluminum and anodized aluminum. They will…
Descriptors: Chemistry, Metallurgy, Cost Effectiveness, Molecular Structure
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Grubelnik, Vladimir; Marhl, Marko; Repnik, Robert – Center for Educational Policy Studies Journal, 2018
Experimental work in the research of astronomical phenomena is often difficult or even impossible because of long-lasting processes or too distant objects and correspondingly too expensive equipment. In this paper, we present an example of observation of the Moon, which is our nearest astronomic object and therefore does not require professional…
Descriptors: Astronomy, Science Instruction, Computation, Elementary School Science
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Repnik, Robert; Ambrožic, Milan – Center for Educational Policy Studies Journal, 2018
The concept of the centre of mass of a rigid body as a virtual point where the weight force acts is not easy to understand without a number of supporting school experiments. In school practice, however, experiments on this topic are often limited to a few of the simplest cases in which a simple flat body, such as a triangle or rectangle, is hung…
Descriptors: Scientific Concepts, Science Experiments, Elementary School Science, Group Activities
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Vollmer, Michael; Möllmann, Klaus-Peter – Physics Education, 2018
Video analysis with a 30 Hz frame rate is the standard tool in physics education. The development of affordable high-speed-cameras has extended the capabilities of the tool for much smaller time scales to the 1 ms range, using frame rates of typically up to 1000 frames s[superscript -1], allowing us to study transient physics phenomena happening…
Descriptors: Physics, Science Education, Motion, Time
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Godínez-Sandí, A.; Fallas-Padilla, D.; España-Tapia, S.; Zúñiga-Villegas, A.; Castro, Milena; Herrera-Sancho, O. A. – Physics Education, 2018
Primary level education follows a pedagogy model where literature and science have been historically separated. Natural children processes are disrupted, as learning based on play curiosity is completely transformed by a chalkboard model. Specific experimental realizations can link thinking processes based on science to study problems…
Descriptors: Science Instruction, Physics, Foreign Countries, Grade 6
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Pleasants, Jacob – Science Teacher, 2018
In classroom science laboratories, unlike a real science laboratory, the teacher can guide students away from potential dead ends and toward data that are most likely to result in accurate conclusions. Sometimes, though, allowing students to pursue dead ends and to collect "bad" data can provide especially rich learning opportunities.…
Descriptors: Science Instruction, Science Experiments, Science Laboratories, Laboratory Experiments
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de Obaldia, Elida; Miller, Norma; Wittel, Fred; Jaimison, George; Wallis, Kendra – Physics Teacher, 2016
Some misconceptions about physics are hard to change. For example, students continue to believe that heavier objects fall faster than light ones, even after a year of physics instruction. Physics misconceptions are persistent. Light objects do fall more slowly if their size-to-weight ratio is sufficient for drag to be appreciable. Motion through a…
Descriptors: Science Instruction, Scientific Concepts, Concept Formation, Physics
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Secco, Richard A.; Sukara, Reynold E. – Physics Teacher, 2016
There are many lab exercises for upper-level school students and freshman undergraduates to measure the value of the local acceleration due to gravity ("g") near Earth's surface. In these exercises, the value of "g" is usually taken to be constant. The approach is often based on measuring the period of a pendulum that is…
Descriptors: College Freshmen, Kinetics, Motion, Science Activities
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Paulins, Paulis; Krauze, Armands; Ozolinsh, Maris; Muiznieks, Andris – Physics Education, 2016
The article focuses on the process of water warming from 0 °C in a glass. An experiment is performed that analyzes the temperature in the top and bottom layers of water during warming. The experimental equipment is very simple and can be easily set up using devices available in schools. The temperature curves obtained from the experiment help us…
Descriptors: Science Instruction, Water, Physics, Scientific Concepts
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Snyder, Abigail B.; Worobo, Randy W.; Orta-Ramirez, Alicia – Journal of Food Science Education, 2016
Food spoilage has an enormous economic impact, and microbial food spoilage plays a significant role in food waste and loss; subsequently, an equally significant portion of undergraduate food microbiology instruction should be dedicated to spoilage microbiology. Here, we describe a set of undergraduate microbiology laboratory exercises that focus…
Descriptors: Food, Undergraduate Study, Microbiology, Science Instruction
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Peterson, Karen I.; Pullman, David P. – Journal of Chemical Education, 2016
A laboratory project for the upper-division physical chemistry laboratory is described, and it combines IR and Raman spectroscopies with Gaussian electronic structure calculations to determine the structure of the oxalate anion in solid alkali oxalates and in aqueous solution. The oxalate anion has two limiting structures whose vibrational spectra…
Descriptors: Science Instruction, Chemistry, Spectroscopy, Computation
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Bodzewski, Kentaro Y.; Caylor, Ryan L.; Comstock, Ashley M.; Hadley, Austin T.; Imholt, Felisha M.; Kirwan, Kory D.; Oyama, Kira S.; Wise, Matthew E. – Journal of Chemical Education, 2016
A differential scanning calorimeter was used to study homogeneous nucleation of ice from micron-sized aqueous ammonium sulfate aerosol particles. It is important to understand the conditions at which these particles nucleate ice because of their connection to cirrus cloud formation. Additionally, the concept of freezing point depression, a topic…
Descriptors: Chemistry, Laboratory Procedures, Laboratory Equipment, Undergraduate Students
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Pacot, Giselle Mae M.; Lee, Lyn May; Chin, Sung-Tong; Marriott, Philip J. – Journal of Chemical Education, 2016
Gas chromatography-mass spectrometry (GC-MS) and GC-tandem MS (GC-MS/MS) are useful in many separation and characterization procedures. GC-MS is now a common tool in industry and research, and increasingly, GC-MS/MS is applied to the measurement of trace components in complex mixtures. This report describes an upper-level undergraduate experiment…
Descriptors: Spectroscopy, Undergraduate Students, Science Experiments, Laboratory Procedures
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Tomac, Mike; Bidleman, Cricket; Brown, Dan – Physics Teacher, 2016
Because she had been blind since birth, we knew that our new student, Cricket, would be unable to make the necessary measurements needed to get any meaningful lab data while all of the other students would be able to use highly accurate commercial Vernier calipers. All we had on loan for Cricket was a Brailled plastic tactile meter stick with low…
Descriptors: Measurement, Blindness, Geographic Location, Braille
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Ma, Xiaofeng; Sun, Rui; Cheng, Jinghui; Liu, Jiaoyan; Gou, Fei; Xiang, Haifeng; Zhou, Xiangge – Journal of Chemical Education, 2016
A laboratory experiment visually exploring two opposite basic principles of fluorescence of aggregation-caused quenching (ACQ) and aggregation-induced emission (AIE) is demonstrated. The students would prepared two salicylaldehyde-based Schiff bases through a simple one-pot condensation reaction of one equiv of 1,2-diamine with 2 equiv of…
Descriptors: Science Instruction, Undergraduate Study, College Science, Chemistry
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