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Showing 271 to 285 of 522 results Save | Export
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English, Rita C. – American Biology Teacher, 2010
I wrote a rap song to explain the process of photosynthesis to my students.
Descriptors: Singing, Plants (Botany), Science Instruction, Teaching Methods
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Franks, Megan; Vore, Rebecca – Science and Children, 2010
Every year, an elementary school celebrates different aspects of Central Texas ecology. This year, they focused on Blackland Prairie, the ecoregion on which the school is located. A schoolwide event at the end of the year offers students the opportunity to teach their parents and their peers what they've learned. The Fourth- and fifth-grade…
Descriptors: Ecology, Grade 5, Science Instruction, Secondary School Science
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Fernandez, Eileen; Geist, Kristi A. – Mathematics Teacher, 2011
Logistic growth displays an interesting pattern: It starts fast, exhibiting the rapid growth characteristic of exponential models. As time passes, it slows in response to constraints such as limited resources or reallocation of energy. The growth continues to slow until it reaches a limit, called capacity. When the growth describes a population,…
Descriptors: Textbooks, Calculus, Mathematics Instruction, Mathematical Concepts
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Strain, Steven R.; Chmielewski, Jerry G. – American Biology Teacher, 2010
The National Science Education Standards prescribe that an understanding of the importance of classifying organisms be one component of a student's educational experience in the life sciences. The use of a classification scheme to identify organisms is one way of addressing this goal. We describe Conifer ID, a computer application that assists…
Descriptors: Visual Aids, Identification, Classification, Biological Sciences
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Sterling, Donna R. – Science and Children, 2010
Children are naturally curious about the world in which they live. To focus this sense of wonder, have your students investigate their local habitat as it changes over the year. This multiseason study will build connections and add relevance to the habitats that children learn about. This series of activities for grades 4-6 explores the changing…
Descriptors: Animals, Grade 4, Natural Resources, Ecology
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Ksiazek, Kelly; McGlathery, Karen; Reynolds, Laura; Schwarzschild, Arthur; Wilkerson, Carissa; Carruthers, Tim; Gurbisz, Cassie; Woerner, Joanna L.; Murray, Laura – Science Activities: Classroom Projects and Curriculum Ideas, 2009
Flowering plants that live underwater in marine and estuarine habitats (seagrasses) are important because they support human food sources, such as crabs and fish, as well as endangered animals, such as turtles and manatees. Seagrasses are now known to be declining globally, largely as a result of increasing pressure from human populations living…
Descriptors: Plants (Botany), Marine Biology, Science Activities, Science Instruction
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Kowles, Richard V. – Bioscene: Journal of College Biology Teaching, 2010
Cell water relationships are important topics to be included in cell biology courses. Differences exist in the control of water relationships in plant cells relative to control in animal cells. One important reason for these differences is that turgor pressure is a consideration in plant cells. Diffusion and osmosis are the underlying factors…
Descriptors: Thermodynamics, Science Activities, Science Laboratories, Cytology
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Brenneman, Kimberly – Young Children, 2009
Scientific Explorers both tall and small, ask questions about objects, living things, and events that interest or puzzle them. They seek answers by examining the world in specific ways that allow them to understand more about it. Young children are often described as natural scientists. They earn this description because they engage in many of the…
Descriptors: Inquiry, Preschool Children, Scientific Concepts, Teaching Methods
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Bricker, Patricia Lynn; Sachs, Susan; Binkley, Russell – Science Scope, 2010
Since 2004, middle and high school students have been monitoring the effects of ground-level ozone by collecting data on observable leaf injury on cutleaf coneflower ("Rudbeckia laciniata") and crownbeard ("Verbesina occidentalis") in the Great Smoky Mountains National Park. This project is part of an ongoing citizen-science effort in which…
Descriptors: Parks, Pollution, Environmental Education, Natural Resources
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Perryman, Kristi L.; Keller, Elizabeth A. – Journal of Creativity in Mental Health, 2009
Floratherapy is a creative arts technique involving the manipulation and use of flowers. It can be used to facilitate clients' awareness into inner issues, allowing them to view their life situations through a nonthreatening and often nonverbal means. This article presents one portion of a qualitative research project designed to explore the…
Descriptors: Qualitative Research, Intervention, Retirement, Females
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Schuster, Dwight; Watanabe, Tad – Science and Children, 2010
It is common practice for elementary classes to plant seeds so that students have the opportunity to observe them germinate and grow. Beyond introducing plant anatomy, this relatively simple activity has the potential to engage children as young plant scientists who investigate the basic needs and behaviors of plants. In this article, the authors…
Descriptors: Plants (Botany), Anatomy, Grade 5, Grade 3
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Burrows, Geoff – American Biology Teacher, 2010
The study of flower structure is essential in plant identification and in understanding sexual reproduction in plants, pollination syndromes, plant breeding, and fruit structure. Thus, study of flower structure and construction of floral formulae are standard parts of first-year university botany and biology courses. These activities involve…
Descriptors: Feedback (Response), Plants (Botany), Biology, Science Instruction
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Delahunty, Tina – Geography Teacher, 2010
The Nature Conservancy's (TNC) Orchard Bog site in Shady Valley, Tennessee, is a unique Appalachian mountain bog that provides many opportunities for student exploration. A biogeographer, a field technician, two biologists, and a historian combined their expertise to teach 100 fourth graders how historians and scientists learn about past…
Descriptors: Research Methodology, Ecology, Grade 4, Historians
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Mason, Kevin; James, Krista; Carlson, Kitrina; D'Angelo, Jean – Science Teacher, 2010
To help high school students gain a solid understanding of invasive plant species, university faculty and students from the University of Wisconsin-Stout (UW-Stout) and a local high school teacher worked together to develop the Invasive Plant Species (IPS) Education Guide. The IPS Education Guide includes nine lessons that give students an…
Descriptors: Plants (Botany), Inquiry, Ecology, High School Students
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Smith, Martha – Science and Children, 2010
Take plant lessons outdoors with this engaging and inquiry-based activity in which third-grade students learn how to apply soil conservation methods to growing plants. They also collect data and draw conclusions about the effectiveness of their method of soil conservation. An added benefit to this activity is that the third-grade students played…
Descriptors: Soil Science, Outdoor Education, Inquiry, Grade 3
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