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Peer reviewedKopaska-Merkel, David C. – Journal of Geoscience Education, 1995
Explains an activity in which students construct a simulated ice core. Materials required include only a freezer, food coloring, a bottle, and water. This hands-on exercise demonstrates how a glacier is formed, how ice cores are studied, and the nature of precision and accuracy in measurement. Suitable for grades three through eight. (Author/PVD)
Descriptors: Demonstrations (Science), Earth Science, Geology, Hands on Science
Peer reviewedTatina, Robert – American Biology Teacher, 1998
Describes two simple laboratory exercises that allow students to test hypotheses concerning the requirement of cell energy for osmosis. The first exercise involves osmotically-caused changes in the length of potato tubers and requires detailed quantitative observations. The second exercise involves osmotically-caused changes in turgor of Elodea…
Descriptors: Biology, Hands on Science, Hypothesis Testing, Laboratory Procedures
Peer reviewedDelany, William; And Others – American Biology Teacher, 1994
Describes an experiment in which groups of students in a plant tissue culture course worked together to test application of the Skoog-Miller model (developed by Skoog and Miller in regeneration of tobacco experiments to demonstrate organogenesis) to sweet potato root explants. (ZWH)
Descriptors: Botany, College Science, Cytology, High Schools
Leyden, Michael B. – Teaching PreK-8, 1996
Describes a science experiment that gives students experiences with the float-sink phenomena and allows them to practice what Piaget called formal operational thinking. The goal of the experiment is to determine some of the variables responsible for cans of soda sinking or floating. (TJQ)
Descriptors: Critical Thinking, Elementary Education, Elementary School Science, Formal Operations
Peer reviewedSolomon, Joan; And Others – Science Education, 1996
Explores pupils' (n=800) ideas about what scientists do, their more general knowledge about theories and how they change, and their impressions of how theory and experiment interact in the school science that they have experienced. Discusses teacher and out-of-school effects, gender, school work, and development with age. Contains 22 references.…
Descriptors: Cognitive Development, Foreign Countries, Questionnaires, Science Experiments
Peer reviewedMartins, Isabel P.; Veiga, Luisa – European Early Childhood Education Research Journal, 2001
Argues that science education is a fundamental tool for global education and that it must be introduced in early years as a first step to a scientific culture for all. Describes testing validity of a didactic strategy for developing the learning of concepts, which was based upon an experimental work approach using everyday life contexts. (Author)
Descriptors: Elementary School Science, Foreign Countries, Primary Education, Science Activities
Peer reviewedKonopka, Allan; Furbacher, Paul; Gedney, Clark – American Biology Teacher, 1999
Advocates using computer-simulated learning environments to allow students to develop their own problem-solving rules when it comes to collecting and evaluating scientific data. Describes the use of "Identibacter interactus" to simulate identification of an unknown microorganism. (WRM)
Descriptors: Biology, Computer Simulation, Higher Education, Microbiology
Peer reviewedMak, Se-yuen – Physics Teacher, 1999
Describes the use of potassium chloride in quantitative project investigations into radioactivity. (WRM)
Descriptors: Higher Education, Nuclear Physics, Physics, Radiation
Peer reviewedGreer, Allan; Kincanon, Eric – Physics Teacher, 2000
According to historical stories, the Saxons placed a bowl with a hole in its bottom in water and used the time it took the bowl to submerge to limit orations. Describes a science activity in which students find a relationship between the diameter of the hole and the time to submergence. (WRM)
Descriptors: Graphs, Higher Education, History, Horology
Peer reviewedTatina, Robert; Mansor, Marcy; Maier, Sarah – American Biology Teacher, 2001
Presents a student laboratory investigation that tests hypotheses about the uptake of phosphate ions by carrots and yeast. (ASK)
Descriptors: Biology, Chemical Reactions, College Science, Food
Reyes, Iliana – Bilingual Research Journal, 2004
This study examined the code-switching patterns in the speech of immigrant Spanish-speaking children. Seven- and 10-year-old boys and girls from bilingual classrooms were each paired with a mutually selected friend, and their speech was collected in two contexts: while the children waited for an expected science experiment and when they worked…
Descriptors: Science Experiments, Spanish Speaking, Communicative Competence (Languages), Bilingual Education
Evans, Carolyn – Science Teacher, 2004
Teachers are obligated to engage students in science and excite them about the wonder and amazement of investigating the world. Teachers need to be willing to move from a lecture-oriented classroom to a student-centered classroom that engages students in inquiry. In this article, the author describes how she moved toward a student-centered…
Descriptors: Science Instruction, Student Motivation, Teaching Methods, Student Participation
Boyce, Angela; Casey, Anne; Walsh, Gary – Biochemistry and Molecular Biology Education, 2004
Courses in introductory biochemistry invariably encompass basic principles of enzymology, with reinforcement of lecture-based material in appropriate laboratory practicals. Students undertaking practical classes are more enthusiastic, and generally display improved performance, when the specific experiments undertaken show direct relevance to…
Descriptors: Laboratory Equipment, Biotechnology, Biochemistry, Environmental Education
Reiner, Miriam; Gilbert, John – International Journal of Science Education, 2004
This study was an attempt to identify the epistemological roots of knowledge when students carry out hands-on experiments in physics. We found that, within the context of designing a solution to a stated problem, subjects constructed and ran thought experiments intertwined within the processes of conducting physical experiments. We show that the…
Descriptors: Physics, Science Experiments, Science Instruction, Foreign Countries
Longtin, Sarah; Guilfoile, Patrick; Asper, Andrea – Journal of Biological Education, 2004
Bacterial antibiotic resistance remains a problem of clinical importance. Current microbiological methods for determining antibiotic resistance are based on culturing bacteria, and may require up to 48 hours to complete. Molecular methods are increasingly being developed to speed the identification of antibiotic resistance and to determine its…
Descriptors: Microbiology, Science Instruction, Molecular Biology, Drug Therapy

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