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Peer reviewedJanners, Martha Y. – Journal of College Science Teaching, 1988
Describes how to organize a student-directed laboratory investigation which is based on amphibian metamorphosis, lasts for nearly a term, and involves extensive group effort. Explains the assignment, student response and opinion, formal paper, and instructor responsibilities. (RT)
Descriptors: Biological Sciences, Biology, College Science, Experiential Learning
Peer reviewedIgelsrud, Don, Ed. – American Biology Teacher, 1988
This article presents a variety of topics discussed in this column and at a biology teachers' workshop concerning the quality and value of lab techniques used for teaching high school biology. Topics included are Drosophila salivary glands, sea urchins, innovations, dyes and networking. (CW)
Descriptors: Biological Sciences, Botany, College Science, Higher Education
Peer reviewedKanis, Ira B.; Saccente, Joseph – Science Activities, 1988
Provided are background information, equipment lists, and procedures for four activities for teaching aquatic ecology. Activities include "The Aquatic Food Chain Game"; "Two-Liter Aqua-Vivariums"; "A Sealed World"; and "Weaving a Web: Evaluation." (CW)
Descriptors: Biological Sciences, Ecological Factors, Ecology, Laboratory Procedures
Peer reviewedSchool Science Review, 1989
Contains articles on digestive enzymes in grasshoppers; bird and badger observation; reactions between hydrochloric acid and sodium carbonate solutions; observing the migration of ions; pupil's heating skills (Bunsen burners); photolysis experimentation; capillary kinetics; experience with trireme; connection circuits; special relativity; a…
Descriptors: Biology, Chemistry, Foreign Countries, Kinetics
Inn, Kristina; And Others – Kamehameha Journal of Education, 1995
Three articles focus on many classroom activities and experiments inspired by the voyage of two canoes, built of traditional materials, from Hawaii's Hilo Harbor in 1995. Nationwide, students followed daily satellite tracking, accessed the Internet for updated accounts of the canoes, talked directly with navigators, and watched television…
Descriptors: Communications Satellites, Computer Assisted Instruction, Computer Networks, Creative Teaching
Peer reviewedWenning, Carl J.; Muehsler, Hans – Physics Teacher, 1996
Describes the implementation and evaluation of a nondirected student research project that aimed at acquainting students with some of the procedures used by physicists in the real world. Outlines specific project designs used by the students. (JRH)
Descriptors: Alternative Assessment, Cooperative Learning, Hands on Science, Physics
Peer reviewedEng, John; Lietman, Thomas – Physics Teacher, 1994
Presents an alternative to the use of a radar to determine how fast an individual can serve a tennis ball. Equipped with a tape recorder and a Macintosh computer, students determine the velocity of a tennis ball by analyzing the sounds and echoes heard on the court. (ZWH)
Descriptors: Acoustics, Athletics, Computer Assisted Instruction, Computer Uses in Education
Peer reviewedDigilov, M. – Quantum, 1991
Discusses 5 innovative experiments conducted by Rutherford in early 1900s utilizing the 30 milligrams of radium salt he personally carried from Europe to Canada in 1903. Traces his work with alpha particles from his original results which determined their nature, charge, and mass, to his technique of backscattering which helped to advance…
Descriptors: Atomic Structure, Atomic Theory, Radiation, Radioisotopes
Peer reviewedFrank, Michael T.; Kluk, Edward – Physics Teacher, 1991
Presents experiments to measure the velocity of sound through metals and other amorphous materials. Describes the equipment used to make the measurements and the possibility of interfacing with a microcomputer. (MDH)
Descriptors: Acoustics, Computer Uses in Education, High Schools, Laboratory Equipment
Peer reviewedHyndman, Lynn – Science and Children, 1991
Presents a cooperative activity between home and school in which parents and students examine the growth of a variety of bulbs. Bulbs are taken home to sprout and returned to school to monitor their growth. Students gather data, hone observation and graphing skills, and communicate with their parents on the project. (MDH)
Descriptors: Biology, Elementary Education, Family School Relationship, Graphs
Peer reviewedHicks, David J. – American Biology Teacher, 1990
Presented is an approach to the study of nutrient cycling in the school laboratory. Discussed are obtaining, processing, and incubating samples; extraction of ions from soil; procedures for nitrate and ammonium analysis; data analysis; an example of results; and other aspects of the nitrogen cycle. (CW)
Descriptors: Biology, Chemical Analysis, College Science, Ecology
Peer reviewedWoods, Donald R. – Journal of College Science Teaching, 1993
Describes problems in teaching problem solving and summarizes research in this area. Presents Guided Design or Guided Decision Making as a problem-solving approach in which groups of students work their way through a model of the problem-solving process as they wrestle with a discipline-specific situation. (PR)
Descriptors: College Faculty, College Science, Group Activities, High Schools
Peer reviewedClift, Philip A. – Science Teacher, 1992
Provides a student worksheet and set-up instructions for a science experiment to demonstrate the concept of density. Students are asked to explain the phenomenon in which a liquid of lower density placed in the bottom of two vertical flasks flows up to replace the liquid of higher density in the upper flask. (MDH)
Descriptors: Chemistry, Density (Matter), Fluid Mechanics, High Schools
Peer reviewedWelch, Larry A. – American Biology Teacher, 1993
Presents an activity to help students understand the precepts of the Hardy-Weinberg principle and simultaneously permit observation of a model of evolution through natural selection in a nonthreatening setting. (PR)
Descriptors: College Science, Evolution, Genetics, High Schools
Peer reviewedBrueningsen, Christopher; Krawiec, Wesley – Science Teacher, 1993
Presents a simple activity designed to allow students to experimentally verify Kepler's second law, sometimes called the law of equal areas. It states that areas swept out by a planet as it orbits the Sun are equal for equal time intervals. (PR)
Descriptors: Astronomy, High Schools, Learning Activities, Physics


