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Showing 1 to 15 of 158 results Save | Export
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Knurr, Benjamin J.; Hauri, James F. – Journal of Chemical Education, 2020
For the past century, humans have been increasingly dependent on plastics, but have not developed adequate disposal practices. In this lab, students are asked whether burning plastic for energy seems like a reasonable disposal technique. To answer the chemical aspects of this question, students use bomb calorimetry to quantify the combustion…
Descriptors: Plastics, Science Instruction, Science Laboratories, Chemistry
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Iraya Yánez-Pérez; Radu Bogdan Toma; Jesús Ángel Meneses-Villagrá – Journal of New Approaches in Educational Research, 2024
Virtual laboratories and simulations have emerged as innovative solutions for science teaching. However, existing resources have various limitations and constraints including cognitive load/mental burden and limited coverage of all necessary steps in scientific inquiry, focusing mainly on the experimental simulation. To bridge this gap and address…
Descriptors: Preservice Teachers, Student Attitudes, Computer Software, Handheld Devices
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Nja, Cecilia Obi; Cornelius-Ukpepi, Bernedette; Edoho, Emmanuel Asuquo; Neji, Hope Amba – Educational Research and Reviews, 2020
This paper seeks to investigate how students' performance in Chemistry can be enhanced by using kitchen resources in Calabar. The kitchen resources used included a piece of white paper, a swab, lemon juice and candle. These were used to show that paper cellulose was oxidized by flame due to the catalysis of lemon juice acid. Other materials used…
Descriptors: Chemistry, Teaching Methods, Foreign Countries, Secondary School Students
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Barbiric, Dora; Tribe, Lorena; Soriano, Rosario – Journal of Chemical Education, 2015
In this laboratory, students calculated the nutritional value of common foods to assess the energy content needed to answer an everyday life application; for example, how many kilometers can an average person run with the energy provided by 100 g (3.5 oz) of beef? The optimized geometries and the formation enthalpies of the nutritional components…
Descriptors: Chemistry, Energy, Food, Science Laboratories
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Xu, Beichen; Su, Jun; Wang, Weiguo – Physics Education, 2018
Cosmic expansion is an important concept in astronomy. For ease of understanding, astronomers generally draw an analogy between cosmic expansion and the expansion of a spherical surface in 3D space. This study theoretically and experimentally investigates the laws governing the motion of particles on the surface of a balloon during expansion.…
Descriptors: Physics, Science Instruction, Astronomy, Motion
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Therrien, Mona; Calder, Beth L.; Castonguay, Zakkary J. – Journal of Food Science Education, 2018
Students in the Didactic Program in Dietetics (DPD) at the University of Maine were exposed to the cheese-making process, within a lab setting of two hours, utilizing an accelerated recipe for a Queso Fresco-style cheese. The purpose of this project was to provide students with a novel, hands-on learning experience, which covered concepts of…
Descriptors: Teaching Methods, Dietetics, Food, Learning Experience
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Williams, David; Warden, Nicole; Wharton, Barry – Physics Education, 2016
A number of organisations have provided instructions on how to produce small quantities of liquid oxygen in the classroom using liquid nitrogen and a copper condensation coil (Lister 1995 "Classic Chemistry Demonstrations" (London: Royal Society of Chemistry) pp 61-2, French and Hibbert 2010 "Phys. Educ." 45 221-2). The method…
Descriptors: Science Experiments, Scientific Concepts, Scientific Methodology, Scientific Principles
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Beck, Rachel C.; Erdmann, Mitzy A. – Journal of Chemical Education, 2018
Identification and quantification of an unknown illicit drug (cocaine) from both simulated drug paraphernalia and simulated urine can be achieved via direct analysis in real time (DART) triple quadrupole linear ion trap (QTRAP) mass spectrometry (MS). We describe a novel, hands-on laboratory activity which utilizes the recent DART technology…
Descriptors: Science Instruction, Scientific Concepts, Laboratory Experiments, Science Activities
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Gorospe, Kelvin D.; Fox, Bradley K.; Haverkort-Yeh, Roxanne D.; Tamaru, Clyde S.; Rivera, Malia Ana J. – Journal of Geoscience Education, 2013
We present a hands-on, inquiry-based activity exploring how CO[subscript 2] input to seawater affects the skeletons of several species of reef-building corals and other marine organisms by testing for changes in pH and calcium ion concentrations. Originally developed to inspire and recruit high school students in the state of Hawai'i into the…
Descriptors: Science Instruction, Inquiry, Oceanography, Scientific Concepts
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Özbek, Necdet Sinan; Eker, Ilyas – IEEE Transactions on Education, 2015
This study describes a set of real-time interactive experiments that address system identification and model reference adaptive control (MRAC) techniques. In constructing laboratory experiments that contribute to efficient teaching, experimental design and instructional strategy are crucial, but a process for doing this has yet to be defined. This…
Descriptors: Computer Assisted Instruction, Laboratory Experiments, College Seniors, Undergraduate Students
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Crujeiras-Pérez, B.; Jiménez-Aleixandre, M. P. – Chemistry Education Research and Practice, 2017
This paper examines the process of high school students' planning investigations in the chemistry laboratory across two consecutive academic years in terms of their actions and their progress. The context is a set of five inquiry-based laboratory tasks in which participants (9th and 10th graders, 14-15 and 15-16 years of age) are required to plan…
Descriptors: High School Students, Learner Engagement, Longitudinal Studies, Foreign Countries
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Richert, Alex; Binder, P. -M. – Physics Teacher, 2011
The siphon is a very useful example of early technology, the operation of which has long been well understood. A recent article makes the claim that established beliefs regarding this device are incorrect and proposes a "chain model" in which intermolecular forces within the fluid play a large role while atmospheric pressure does not. We have…
Descriptors: Play, Science Experiments, Science Instruction, Molecular Structure
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Rees, B. B.; Boily, P.; Williamson, L. A. C. – Advances in Physiology Education, 2009
Anaerobic metabolism is recruited in vertebrates under conditions of intense exercise or lowered environmental oxygen availability (hypoxia), typically resulting in the accumulation of lactate in blood and tissues. Lactate will be cleared over time after the reoxygenation of tissues, eventually returning to control levels. Here, we present a…
Descriptors: Animals, Metabolism, Chemistry, Laboratory Experiments
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Twomey, Patrick; O'Sullivan, Colm; O'Riordan, John – European Journal of Physics, 2009
A simple undergraduate experiment designed to study cooling purely by radiation and cooling by a combination of convection and radiation is described. Results indicate that the contribution from radiative cooling in normal laboratory experiments is more significant than students often realize, even in the case of forced cooling. (Contains 1…
Descriptors: Radiation, Laboratory Experiments, Science Instruction, Science Experiments
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Alber, Joshua P.; DeGrand, Michael J.; Cermak, Diana M. – Journal of Chemical Education, 2011
The Grignard reaction and the addition of protecting groups are standard reactions in an organic chemistry course. Organic students learn about the "quench" step of the Grignard reaction using acid and water and the acid-catalyzed hydrolysis to remove the protecting group, yet in the lecture students find these two reactions to be confusing in…
Descriptors: Organic Chemistry, Chemistry, Laboratory Experiments, Spectroscopy
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