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Doyle, Andrea M.; Reilly, Joe; Murphy, Niamh; Kavanagh, Pierce V.; O'Brien, John E.; Walsh, Martin S.; Walsh, John J. – Journal of Chemical Education, 2004
A member of a related genus of the valerianaceae, Centranthus ruber, is used, that yields a higher percentage valtrate than other related species such as "Valeriana officinalis," there by making easier isolation in pure form.
Descriptors: Narcotics, Structural Analysis (Science), Science Education, Plants (Botany)
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Guidetti, Mary D. – School Arts: The Art Education Magazine for Teachers, 2004
In this article, the author describes how she introduced the mola designs of the Kuna people of the San Blas Islands to her fifth grade class. The students became excited by the tropical imagery; the wildlife, intertwined with the flowering plant life and the ocean, in colorful and black and-white patterns, because it brought forth such…
Descriptors: Grade 5, Plants (Botany), Art Activities, American Indian Culture
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Science Teacher, 2005
Curcumin, the pungent yellow spice found in both turmeric and curry powders, blocks a key biological pathway needed for development of melanoma and other cancers, according to a study that appears in the journal Cancer. Researchers from The University of Texas M. D. Anderson Cancer Center demonstrate how curcumin stops laboratory strains of…
Descriptors: Cancer, Cytology, Oncology, Preventive Medicine
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Helms, T. C.; Doetkott, C. – Journal of Natural Resources and Life Sciences Education, 2007
We developed educational software to show graduate students how to plan molecular marker experiments. These computer simulations give the students feedback on the precision of their experiments. The objective of the software was to show students using a hands-on approach how: (1) environmental variation influences the range of the estimates of the…
Descriptors: Intervals, Computer Software, Graduate Study, Genetics
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Lau, Joann M.; Korn, Robert W. – American Biology Teacher, 2007
In this article, the authors present a laboratory exercise in data collection and statistical analysis in biological space using clustered stomates on leaves of "Begonia" plants. The exercise can be done in middle school classes by students making their own slides and seeing imprints of cells, or at the high school level through collecting data of…
Descriptors: Laboratories, Goodness of Fit, Data Collection, Biological Sciences
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Thompson, Stephen – Journal of College Science Teaching, 2007
Research shows that many students hold misconceptions related to plant functions (Hershey 2004). Some of these students will become teachers with little content understanding to identify their students' misconceptions about plants (Amir and Tamir 1994). The literature on teaching about plants doesn't help; it contains frequent errors,…
Descriptors: Sciences, Misconceptions, Science Teachers, Biological Sciences
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Boyd, Amy E. – American Biology Teacher, 2006
Applying botanical knowledge to a simulated forensic investigation provides inquiry-based and problem-based learning in the botany classroom. This paper details one such forensic investigation in which students use what they have learned about plant morphology and anatomy to analyze evidence and solve a murder mystery. (Contains 1 table.)
Descriptors: Teaching Methods, Persuasive Discourse, Investigations, Problem Based Learning
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Coffman, Margaret; Peggy, Liggit – Science and Children, 2005
Just imagine the excitement in the classroom when Johnny Appleseed strides in. Barefoot and dressed in a burlap sack, he-well, actually, it's you dressed up as Johnny-wears a tin pan for a hat and smiles as he relates the reason for his visit. Fall is apple season, and he's here to explain how all the beautiful fall apples were produced. The story…
Descriptors: Biological Sciences, Science Education, Class Activities, Plants (Botany)
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Booth, Bibi – Science and Children, 2005
Amber is the fossilized resin of now-extinct trees, primarily ancient conifers but also some flowering tropical trees. An aromatic, soft, sticky substance, resin in extinct trees probably served the same purposes as resin in modern trees: to protect the plant by sealing cuts and by excluding bacteria, fungi, and insects.
Descriptors: Plants (Botany), Biological Sciences, Science Activities, Science Instruction
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West, Donna – Science Scope, 2004
Teaching plant growth to seventh-grade life science students has been interesting for the author because she grew up in a rural area and always had to help in the garden. She made many assumptions about what her rural and suburban students knew. One year she decided to have them grow plants to observe the roots, stems, leaves, flowers, and fruit…
Descriptors: Plants (Botany), Biological Sciences, Science Activities, Science Instruction
Oliver, Phillip – Library Journal, 2004
Exotic, captivating, and seductive, orchids have long fascinated plant lovers. They first attracted the attention of Westerners in the 17th century, when explorers brought back samples from South America and Asia. By the mid-1800s, orchid collecting had reached a fever pitch, not unlike that of the Dutch tulip craze of the 1630s, with rich (and…
Descriptors: College Libraries, Public Libraries, Library Materials, Plants (Botany)
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Jenkins, Ronald L.; Howell, W. Mike; Davenport, L. J.; Wood, Linda F. – American Biology Teacher, 2003
Photography makes an easy and excellent tool for teaching field biology courses, allowing students to study nature without harming it. This photographic technique is used in capturing images of vertebrates, invertebrates, and plants during class field trips, then making these images available for students to identify and study from a departmental…
Descriptors: Field Trips, Photography, Biology, Animals
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Briten, Elizabeth – Primary Science Review, 2006
The exciting world of plants may be something of a mystery to many children, and the often-dry content of a curriculum taught indoors inhibits real understanding of many complex biological processes. Moving outdoors opens up an unexplored world and presents rich opportunities for imaginative learning. The "Life processes and living…
Descriptors: Science Instruction, Science Activities, Foreign Countries, Creativity
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Damonte, Kathleen – Science and Children, 2005
Living things respond to a stimulus, which is a change in the surroundings. Some common stimuli are noises, smells, and things the people see or feel, such as a change in temperature. Animals often respond to a stimulus by moving. Because plants can't move around in the same way animals do, plants have to respond in a different way. Plants can…
Descriptors: Plants (Botany), Science Education, Physics, Scientific Concepts
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Rinaudi, Luciana; Isola, Maria C.; Giordano, Walter – Biochemistry and Molecular Biology Education, 2004
Symbiosis between rhizobia and leguminous plants leads to the formation of nitrogen-fixing root nodules. In the present article, we recommend the use of the ribosomal RNA (rRNA) isolated from legume nodules in an experimental class with the purpose of introducing students to the structure of eukaryotic and prokaryotic ribosomes and of…
Descriptors: Genetics, Molecular Biology, Plants (Botany), Science Instruction
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