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Helle, Laura; Nivala, Markus; Kronqvist, Pauliina – Anatomical Sciences Education, 2013
The adoption of virtual microscopy at the University of Turku, Finland, created a unique real-world laboratory for exploring ways of reforming the learning environment. The purpose of this study was to evaluate the students' reactions and the impact of a set of measures designed to boost an experimental group's understanding of abnormal histology…
Descriptors: Laboratory Equipment, Medical Education, Computer Uses in Education, Educational Technology
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Willis, David A.; Krueger, Paul S.; Kendrick, Alice – Journal of STEM Education: Innovations and Research, 2013
Undergraduate research opportunities are valued by university faculty and administrators in part because of the belief that they are useful for attracting students to graduate school. Other perceived benefits are that these programs improve students' engagement in their respective disciplines, enhance students' understanding of theory by…
Descriptors: Student Attitudes, Engineering, Communication Skills, Laboratories
Hawkins, Ian C. – ProQuest LLC, 2013
The role of the teaching laboratory in science education has been debated over the last century. The goals and purposes of the laboratory are still debated and while most science educators consider laboratory a vital part of the education process, they differ widely on the purposes for laboratory and what methods should be used to teach…
Descriptors: Science Instruction, Science Laboratories, Technology Uses in Education, Educational Technology
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Milanick, Mark; Graham, Kerri; Wessel, Melissa – American Biology Teacher, 2013
Students are provided with a mystery concerning dogs that are paralyzed. This motivates a laboratory exercise to measure parameters from the dog's "blood" to determine whether the paralysis is due to pesticide poisoning or an autoimmune attack on nerve myelin. Most of the materials are available from the grocery store. The real-world nature of the…
Descriptors: Science Activities, Science Instruction, Science Laboratories, Physiology
Shea, Kathleen – ProQuest LLC, 2015
Nursing students are expected to apply knowledge from lectures and laboratories to the clinical setting. One major challenge of nursing educators is facilitating the transfer of knowledge to the clinical-practice setting. Simulation-based education provides students with an experiential-learning activity within the context of a simulated clinical…
Descriptors: Nursing Students, Nursing Education, Clinical Experience, Simulation
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Roman, Harry T. – Tech Directions, 2011
With some simple metal samples and common household liquids, teachers can build wet cell batteries and use them to teach students about batteries and how they work. In this article, the author offers information that is derived from some simple experiments he conducted in his basement workshop and can easily be applied in the classroom or lab. He…
Descriptors: Technology Education, Teaching Methods, Science Experiments, Laboratories
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Belendez, Augusto; Arribas, Enrique; Marquez, Andres; Ortuno, Manuel; Gallego, Sergi – European Journal of Physics, 2011
An approximate scheme for obtaining the period of a simple pendulum for large-amplitude oscillations is analysed and discussed. When students express the exact frequency or the period of a simple pendulum as a function of the oscillation amplitude, and they are told to expand this function in a Taylor series, they always do so using the…
Descriptors: Laboratory Equipment, Teaching Methods, Mathematical Formulas, Physics
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Chang, Ming-Mei; Lovett, Janice – Biochemistry and Molecular Biology Education, 2011
Western blot analysis, commonly known as "Western blotting," is a standard tool in every laboratory where proteins are analyzed. It involves the separation of polypeptides in polyacrylamide gels followed by the electrophoretic transfer of the separated polypeptides onto a nitrocellulose or polyvinylidene fluoride membrane. A replica of the…
Descriptors: Science Laboratories, Biology, Biochemistry, Science Instruction
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Campbell, Dean J.; Wright, Emily A.; Dayisi, Mardhia O.; Hoehn, Michael R.; Kennedy, Branden F.; Maxfield, Brian M. – Journal of Chemical Education, 2011
In 1970, deposition of fly ash from a coal burning power plant in downtown Peoria produced minor damage in the vicinity of its smokestack, including runs in ladies nylon stockings. In this article, we review the historical event and discuss the chemistry behind the depolymerization of the nylon, as well as laboratory experiments demonstrating how…
Descriptors: Fuels, Pollution, Laboratory Experiments, Classroom Techniques
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Macchi, Veronica; Porzionato, Andrea; Stecco, Carla; Tiengo, Cesare; Parenti, Anna; Cestrone, Adriano; De Caro, Raffaele – Anatomical Sciences Education, 2011
Current undergraduate medical curricula provides relatively little time for cadaver dissection. The Department of Human Anatomy and Physiology at the University of Padova has organized a pilot project with the University Hospital for the donation of body parts that are surgically removed for therapeutic purposes and destined under Italian law for…
Descriptors: Surgery, Anatomy, Human Body, Medical Education
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Harden, Joshua; Joshi, Amitabh; Serna, Juan D. – European Journal of Physics, 2011
Single and double electromagnetically induced transparencies (EIT) in a medium, consisting of four-level atoms in the inverted-Y configuration, are discussed using mechanical and electrical analogies. A three-coupled spring-mass system subject to damping and driven by an external force is used to represent the four-level atom mechanically. The…
Descriptors: Undergraduate Students, Physics, Science Instruction, College Science
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Smith, Glenn S. – European Journal of Physics, 2011
The electromagnetic field is determined for a time-varying electric dipole moving with a constant velocity that is parallel to its moment. Graphics are used to visualize this field in the rest frame of the dipole and in the laboratory frame when the dipole is moving at relativistic speed. Various phenomena from special relativity are clearly…
Descriptors: Scientific Concepts, Physics, Science Instruction, Energy
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Yang, Hujiang; Xiao, Jinghua; Yang, Tianyu; Qiu, Chen – European Journal of Physics, 2011
Compared with a single gravity pendulum, the spherical pendulum behaves more complicatedly in experiments, which makes it difficult to measure. In this paper, we present a method to visualize the trajectories of a spherical pendulum by employing a gravity ball with a lit LED and a digital camera. This new measurement is inexpensive and easy to…
Descriptors: Photography, Mechanics (Physics), Laboratory Equipment, Science Experiments
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Li, Weibin; Kagan, Gerald; Hopson, Russell; Williard, Paul G. – Journal of Chemical Education, 2011
Increasingly, the undergraduate chemistry curriculum includes nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopy. Advanced NMR techniques are often taught including two-dimensional gradient-based experiments. An investigation of intermolecular forces including viscosity, by a variety of methods, is often integrated in the undergraduate physical and…
Descriptors: Science Laboratories, Spectroscopy, Chemistry, Molecular Structure
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Hill, Brent J. F.; Goodman, Ian; Moran, William M. – Bioscene: Journal of College Biology Teaching, 2011
Most undergraduate physiology texts describe veins simply as reservoirs for blood and conduits for return of blood to the heart. This article describes a laboratory exercise that can be performed by students to demonstrate that veins are much more than reservoirs and conduits for blood flow: they possess a dynamic rhythmic contraction. In this…
Descriptors: Metabolism, Physiology, Scoring, Human Body
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