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Showing all 9 results Save | Export
Raechel Jasmine Hill – ProQuest LLC, 2024
The magnitude and scale of current threats to ecosystems requires interdisciplinary approaches to both science and training. For example, urbanization has resulted in increased runoff from communities into coastal habitats, necessitating work across the marine-terrestrial interface. This runoff holds myriad pollutants which can impact vulnerable…
Descriptors: Ecology, Environmental Education, Urbanization, Marine Biology
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Talano, Melina A.; Ibañez, Sabrina; Sosa Alderete, Lucas G.; Wevar Oller, Ana L.; Vezza, Mariana E.; Medina, María I.; Agostini, Elizabeth – Journal of Biological Education, 2021
Universities play an important role in society and in providing solutions for its problems. Environmental pollution is one of the most serious problems facing the world today. Thus, universities are increasingly including subjects related to the environment and its conservation both in their educational and research programmes. Generally,…
Descriptors: Undergraduate Students, Biochemistry, Science Instruction, Environmental Education
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Tammi, Tuure – Environmental Education Research, 2020
The recent more-than-human turn has increased interest in writing about relations between humans and other animals. In addition, scholars have called for a need to complement the animal turn with a turn to microbes. Microbes entangle all life in relations and participate in processes of living and dying, but thus far, they have been largely absent…
Descriptors: Environmental Education, Ethics, Teaching Methods, Animals
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Kelley, Amanda L.; Hanson, Paul R.; Kelley, Stephanie A. – American Biology Teacher, 2015
Ocean acidification, a product of CO[subscript 2] absorption by the world's oceans, is largely driven by the anthropogenic combustion of fossil fuels and has already lowered the pH of marine ecosystems. Organisms with calcium carbonate shells and skeletons are especially susceptible to increasing environmental acidity due to reduction in the…
Descriptors: Science Instruction, Climate, Oceanography, Animals
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Salman Ashraf, S. – Biochemistry and Molecular Biology Education, 2013
Our environment is under constant pressure and threat from various sources of pollution. Science students, in particular chemistry students, must not only be made aware of these issues, but also be taught that chemistry (and science) can provide solutions to such real-life issues. To this end, a newly developed biochemistry laboratory experiment…
Descriptors: Environmental Education, Biochemistry, Pollution, Science Instruction
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Duckworth, Owen W.; Harrington, James M. – Journal of Natural Resources and Life Sciences Education, 2012
Soil biogeochemistry, a discipline that explores the chemical speciation and transformations of elements in soils and the relationships between soils and global biogeochemical cycles, is becoming a popular course offering because it unites themes from a number of other courses. In this article, we present a set of case studies that have been used…
Descriptors: Discussion (Teaching Technique), Student Evaluation, Active Learning, Case Studies
Houston, David R. – 1979
This guide is intended to provide stimuli for discussion and review of ecological principles and their relevance to daily human existence. The illustrations, purposefully detailed and complex, are intended to provide a basis for in-depth discussion. The bulletin is intended to supplement classroom materials and also to serve non-classroom…
Descriptors: Biochemistry, Biology, Conservation Education, Earth Science
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Ricci, Juan C. Diaz; And Others – Biochemical Education, 1988
Presents three dimensional models of biological pathways for the following cycles: carbon, nitrogen, sulfur, and a combination of the three. Discusses steps involved in each cycle and breaks each cycle into trophic and environmental regions. (MVL)
Descriptors: Biochemistry, Chemical Reactions, College Science, Conservation (Concept)
Miller, Larry E. – 1974
The course of study represents the fifth of six modules in advanced crop and soil science and introduces the agriculture student to chemical features of the soil. Upon completing the four day lesson, the student will be able to: (1) list macro- and micro-nutrients, (2) define pH and its effect on plants, (3) outline Cation Exchange of the soil,…
Descriptors: Agricultural Chemical Occupations, Agricultural Education, Agronomy, Behavioral Objectives