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Kirsty Dunnett; Anders Mattias Lundmark – International Journal of Science Education, 2024
'A lack of prior knowledge in the other discipline' is often given by geoscience instructors to explain why students struggle to apply knowledge from other disciplines to the Earth. We examine this assumption by considering the disciplinary crossing of buoyancy (physics) to isostasy (geoscience). We investigate the teachers' perspective through…
Descriptors: Science Instruction, Earth Science, Interdisciplinary Approach, Physics
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Ha, Hyejin; Jang, Taehun; Sohn, Sang Ho; Kim, Junghwa – Physics Teacher, 2022
A solenoid is a coil wound many times on a cylinder of length greater than its diameter. Solenoids are mainly used as electromagnets, because a magnetic field is formed when current flows through a solenoid. The solenoid described in secondary school and university textbooks is a single-layered solenoid. Further, textbooks and papers focusing on…
Descriptors: Magnets, Secondary School Science, College Science, Textbooks
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Green, Michael E. – International Society for Technology, Education, and Science, 2021
In a chemistry course for students not majoring in science, there is more to learn than some memorized facts: the student can find, in most non-major chemistry texts, the definition of atomic number, something about chemical bonding, and names of some classes of chemical compounds. Where facts come from and how accurately they are known are often…
Descriptors: Chemistry, Science Instruction, Science Experiments, Scientific Concepts
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Rebecca Higgins; Breen Riley; Jennell Talley; Alessandra Barrera; Jennifer Hurst-Kennedy; Shoshana Katzman – American Biology Teacher, 2023
To reduce the cost of educational materials needed by students, we generated a no-cost open educational resources (OER) textbook for an undergraduate level cell biology course. Cell biology is part of the curriculum in various undergraduate degrees for science, technology, engineering, and math majors, therefore generation of OER targets a large…
Descriptors: Science Instruction, Open Educational Resources, Textbooks, College Science
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Giulotto, Enrico; Malgieri, Massimiliano – Physics Education, 2022
The distinction between pressure in a liquid and in a gas is often treated in a cursory way, or not treated at all, even in university level textbooks. Most texts fail to point out the relation between pressure and density in a gas as compared to pressure in a--virtually incompressible--liquid. In many instances this also results in a dismissive…
Descriptors: Science Instruction, College Science, Secondary School Science, Teaching Methods
Bailey Thompson; Zoie Bunch; Maia Popova – Journal of Chemical Education, 2023
The number of studies analyzing chemistry textbooks has steadily increased over the years and has notably surged in the past decade. In this literature review, we examine the research literature on chemistry textbooks. The review spans 40 years of research (from 1981 to 2021) and includes 79 studies published in over 20 different journals,…
Descriptors: Chemistry, Textbooks, Literature Reviews, Educational Research
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Andrew M. Olney – Grantee Submission, 2023
Multiple choice questions are traditionally expensive to produce. Recent advances in large language models (LLMs) have led to fine-tuned LLMs that generate questions competitive with human-authored questions. However, the relative capabilities of ChatGPT-family models have not yet been established for this task. We present a carefully-controlled…
Descriptors: Test Construction, Multiple Choice Tests, Test Items, Algorithms
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Chang, Hasok; Duncan, Katherine; Kim, Kihyang; Paik, Seoung-Hey – Chemistry Education Research and Practice, 2020
We present a critical discussion of how chemistry textbooks treat the electrolysis of water and aqueous salt solutions, based on a survey of general chemistry textbooks in English and Korean at secondary and tertiary levels, also informed by the historical background of 19th-century debates. English-language textbooks present various and…
Descriptors: Science Instruction, Chemistry, Textbooks, Secondary School Science
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Hitier, Mathilde; González-Martín, Alejandro S. – International Journal of Research in Undergraduate Mathematics Education, 2022
Of the many disciplines that rely on calculus, physics is among those with the strongest connections to this branch of mathematics. For instance, the derivative--one of the key notions of calculus--is used to describe velocity and acceleration, which play a central role in mechanics. In post-secondary education, in particular at the college level,…
Descriptors: Calculus, Physics, Motion, Scientific Concepts
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Metcalf, Leah E.; Bernacki, Matthew L.; Bernacki, Lucas E. – Journal of Research in Science Teaching, 2023
Discipline-based educational researchers and institutions that provide guidance on Science, Technology, Engineering, and Mathematics instruction have long documented the impact of active learning strategies on student learning and achievement, the lack of incorporation of active learning into undergraduate instruction, and the languishing rates of…
Descriptors: Active Learning, Textbooks, Biology, Electronic Publishing
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Greenslade, Thomas B., Jr. – Physics Teacher, 2019
Ask a physics person what the name of Robert A. Millikan brings to mind, and most would immediately think of the eponymous experiments that he did with the charge on the electron in the years 1908 to 1913. A few might remember his work, starting in 1914, with the experimental determination of Planck's constant using the photoelectric effect. Few…
Descriptors: College Science, Scientists, Biographies, Physics
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Slisko, Josip; Cruz, Adrián Corona – European Journal of Physics Education, 2019
Many authors suggest that is necessary to include the most important episodes from physics history in teaching and learning in order to give students some ideas about the nature of science. The pendulum-related aspects are considered as very adequate for that purpose. Unfortunately, when some physics textbook authors present historical…
Descriptors: Science Instruction, Motion, Physics, Scientific Concepts
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Yoho, Rachel; Kohn, Kathryn Paris; Urban-Lurain, Mark; Merrill, John; Haudek, Kevin Charles – Journal on Excellence in College Teaching, 2020
Crosscutting concepts, such as "structure" and "function," are present in courses at multiple educational levels across the disciplines. These two terms are used individually in everyday language and have a long, rich history. The authors explore the meaning and presentation of biological function, which often is not clearly…
Descriptors: Scientific Concepts, Biology, Definitions, Science Instruction
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Weiss, Charles J. – Journal of Chemical Education, 2021
Scientific computing and computer literacy are increasingly important skills for chemistry students to learn, but despite this need, there is an absence of chemistry-specific texts available for teaching the subject. This article introduces a freely available textbook released under a Creative Commons license for use in an undergraduate scientific…
Descriptors: Science Instruction, Chemistry, College Science, Undergraduate Study
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Anderson, Shannon Y. C.; Ong, Whitney S. Y.; Momsen, Jennifer L. – Chemistry Education Research and Practice, 2020
Nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopy is vital to synthesis and provides rich problem-solving opportunities to organic chemistry students. Using the theories of scaffolding, interleaving, and blocking, our research systematically explores how textbooks introduce and reinforce spectral features when teaching students to solve [superscript…
Descriptors: Organic Chemistry, Science Instruction, Textbooks, Scaffolding (Teaching Technique)
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