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Marincean, Simona; Scribner, Steven L. – Journal of Chemical Education, 2020
University of Michigan--Dearborn offers a one semester, two credit, stand-alone Organic Chemistry Laboratory course aimed at students with an interest in health-related careers. The COVID-19 pandemic led to a campus closure and a subsequent transition to a partially remote laboratory curriculum developed on-the-fly for the Winter 2020 semester…
Descriptors: Science Instruction, College Science, Undergraduate Study, Science Laboratories
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Wu, Nancy; Kubo, Tomohiro; Hall, Ariana O.; Zurcher, Danielle M.; Phadke, Sameer; Wallace, Rachel L.; McNeil, Anne J. – Journal of Chemical Education, 2020
Although teaching laboratories offer students the opportunity to act and think like chemists, in many cases students simply follow written procedures to generate predetermined outcomes. In recent years, there has been a movement toward inquiry-, problem-, and discovery-based learning. In a similar vein, the first-semester introductory organic…
Descriptors: Organic Chemistry, College Science, Introductory Courses, Laboratory Experiments
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Cooper, Melanie M.; Stowe, Ryan L.; Crandell, Olivia M.; Klymkowsky, Michael W. – Journal of Chemical Education, 2019
The fundamental structure of a typical mainstream two-semester organic chemistry course, populated mostly by life science majors and taught at universities throughout the United States, has changed little since the 1970s. However, much of the research on learning in organic chemistry has been devoted to characterizing student difficulties of…
Descriptors: Organic Chemistry, College Science, Undergraduate Study, Curriculum Design
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Baldwin, Bruce W.; Kuntzleman, Thomas S. – Journal of Chemical Education, 2018
The separation of chamazulene from hydrophilic contaminants present in blue tansy oil provides a visually engaging example of two common techniques: extraction and thin-layer chromatography (TLC). This application uses liquid CO[subscript 2] as a lipophilic solvent to pull a brilliant blue hydrocarbon molecule, chamazulene, out of or through a…
Descriptors: Science Instruction, Science Laboratories, College Science, Organic Chemistry
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Rebecca C. Fantone; Ina Zaimi; Krista Meserve; Eleni K. Geragosian; Christian O. A´lvarez-Sa´nchez; Jeffrey L. Spencer; Ginger V. Shultz – Journal of Chemical Education, 2023
Graduate teaching assistants (GTAs) are crucial facilitators of undergraduate education, yet many begin their teaching appointments with minimal knowledge of teaching practices. Chemistry Instructional Coaching offers GTAs at the University of Michigan an opportunity to develop their instructional practice through a collaborative, nonevaluative,…
Descriptors: Chemistry, Faculty Development, Teaching Assistants, Graduate Students
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Green, Abigail I.; Parent, Kristin N.; Underwood, Sonia M.; Matz, Rebecca L. – American Biology Teacher, 2021
Core chemistry ideas can be useful tools for explaining biological phenomena, but students often have difficulty understanding these core ideas within general chemistry. Connecting these ideas to biologically relevant situations is even more difficult. These difficulties arise, in part, from a lack of explicit opportunities in relevant courses for…
Descriptors: Scientific Concepts, Chemistry, Biology, Interdisciplinary Approach
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Zellner, Nicolle – Journal of Astronomy & Earth Sciences Education, 2018
An introductory Astronomy survey course is often taken to satisfy a college graduation requirement for non-science majors at colleges around the United States. In this course, material that can be broadly categorized into topics related to "the sky", "the Solar System", "the Galaxy", and "cosmology" is…
Descriptors: Undergraduate Students, College Science, Nonmajors, Astronomy
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Umarji, Osman; Wan, Sirui; Wolff, Fabian; Eccles, Jacquelynne – Developmental Psychology, 2023
This study synthesizes theories of achievement motivation to better understand the development of academic task values in high school students and their relation to college major selection. We utilize longitudinal structural equation modeling to understand how grades relate to task values, how task values across domains relate to one another over…
Descriptors: College Bound Students, Majors (Students), Decision Making, Student Motivation
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Chinoy, Natasha; Stoub, Hayden; Ogrodzinski, Yvonne; Smith, Katelyn; Bahal, Devika; Zubek, John – Advances in Physiology Education, 2022
Professional skill development has emerged as an increasingly important facet of undergraduate training, specifically within science curricula. The primarily agreed on professional skills for a well-rounded scientist include teamwork, oral communication, written communication, and quantitative skills. The demand for these skills has been driven by…
Descriptors: Skill Development, Undergraduate Students, College Science, Student Attitudes
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Rennhack, Jonathan P.; VanRyn, Valerie S.; Poterack, James M.; Wehrwein, Erica A. – Advances in Physiology Education, 2020
The laboratory course is an excellent venue to apply content, practice inquiry, improve critical thinking, practice key clinical skills, and work with data. The use of inquiry-based course projects allows for students to propose open ended questions, form a hypothesis, design an experiment, collect data, analyze data, draw conclusion, and present…
Descriptors: Research Methodology, Undergraduate Students, Student Research, Physiology
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Stowe, Ryan L.; Cooper, Melanie M. – Journal of Chemical Education, 2017
Organic chemistry is often promoted as a course designed to cultivate skill in scientific "ways of thinking." Expert organic chemists perceive their field as one in which plausible answers to complex questions are arrived at through analytical thought processes. They draw analogy between problem solving in organic chemistry and diagnosis…
Descriptors: Organic Chemistry, Science Instruction, Critical Thinking, Undergraduate Students
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Robertson, Amy D.; Goodhew, Lisa M.; Scherr, Rachel E.; Heron, Paula R. L. – Physical Review Physics Education Research, 2021
Existing research identifying common student ideas about forces focuses on students' misunderstandings, misconceptions, and difficulties. In this paper, we characterize student thinking in terms of resources, framing student thinking as continuous with formal physics. Based on our analysis of 2048 written responses to conceptual questions, we…
Descriptors: College Students, Knowledge Level, Physics, Scientific Concepts
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Natalie S. Vandepol; Ashley Shade – Journal of Microbiology & Biology Education, 2024
The ubiquity and ease with which microbial cells disperse over space is a key concept in microbiology, especially in microbial ecology. The phenomenon prompted Baas Becking's famous "everything is everywhere" statement that now acts as the null hypothesis in studies that test the dispersal limitation of microbial taxa. Despite covering…
Descriptors: Experiential Learning, Learner Engagement, Undergraduate Students, Scientific Concepts
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Cooper, Melanie M.; Posey, Lynmarie A.; Underwood, Sonia M. – Journal of Chemical Education, 2017
In this paper we discuss how and why core ideas can serve as the framework upon which chemistry curricula and assessment items are developed. While there are a number of projects that have specified "big ideas" or "anchoring concepts", the ways that these ideas are subsequently developed may inadvertently lead to fragmentation…
Descriptors: Science Instruction, Chemistry, College Science, Student Centered Learning
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Lujan, Heidi L.; DiCarlo, Stephen E. – Advances in Physiology Education, 2015
The American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS) strongly recommends that "science be taught as science is practiced." This means that the teaching approach must be consistent with the nature of scientific inquiry. In this article, the authors describe how they added scientific inquiry to a large lecture-based physiology…
Descriptors: Physiology, Inquiry, Active Learning, Science Instruction
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