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Showing 286 to 300 of 3,623 results Save | Export
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Li, Xuesong; Van Wie, Bernard J. – Journal of STEM Education: Innovations and Research, 2016
The difficulty in covering chemical engineering concepts using traditional lectures and whiteboard teaching approaches means today's students' learning demands are unfulfilled, so alternate methods are needed. Desktop learning modules (DLMs) are designed to show industrial fluid flow and heat transfer concepts in a standard classroom so students…
Descriptors: Heat, Mechanics (Physics), Chemical Engineering, Experimental Groups
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Cutler, Marianne; Lawrence, Liz – Primary Science, 2016
In this article, Marianne Cutler and Liz Lawrence describe in more detail the opportunities for "working scientifically" provided by this new Association for Science Education (ASE) resource, which was introduced in the previous issue, along with some of the feedback from teachers who have trialled the resources. [This article was…
Descriptors: Science Teachers, Immunization Programs, Disease Control, Science Instruction
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Kawam, Alae; Kouh, Minjoon – Physics Teacher, 2011
In an introductory physics course where students first learn about vectors, they oftentimes struggle with the concept of vector addition and decomposition. For example, the classic physics problem involving a mass on an inclined plane requires the decomposition of the force of gravity into two directions that are parallel and perpendicular to the…
Descriptors: Physics, Introductory Courses, Scientific Concepts, Algebra
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De, Subhranil – Physics Education, 2014
The familiar system involving a uniform ladder sliding against a vertical wall and a horizontal floor is considered again. The floor is taken to be smooth and the wall to be possibly rough--a situation where no matter how large the static friction coefficient between the ladder and the wall, the ladder cannot lean at rest and must slide down.…
Descriptors: Kinetics, Mathematical Logic, Mathematical Models, Physics
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Poce-Fatou, J. A.; Bethencourt, M.; Moreno-Dorado, F. J.; Palacios-Santander, J. M. – Journal of Chemical Education, 2011
The efficiency of a laundry-washing process is typically assessed using reflection measurements. A spectrometer and an integrating sphere are used to obtain the reflection data. The similarities between this equipment and a commercially available flatbed scanner are examined, and the way a flatbed scanner can be used to obtain detergent…
Descriptors: Chemistry, Physics, College Science, Science Instruction
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Lopez-Arias, T.; Gratton, L. M.; Zendri, G.; Oss, S. – Physics Education, 2011
The forces acting on a ball in an air jet have been measured using simple equipment. Such measurements allow quite a precise, non-ambiguous description and understanding of the physical mechanism which explains the famous levitating ball experiment. (Contains 7 figures.)
Descriptors: Physics, Science Experiments, Measurement, Science Activities
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Rajala, Jonathan W.; Evans, Edward A.; Chase, George G. – Chemical Engineering Education, 2015
Third year chemical engineering undergraduate students at The University of Akron designed and fabricated a heat exchanger for a stirred tank as part of a Chemical Engineering Laboratory course. The heat exchanger portion of this course was three weeks of the fifteen week long semester. Students applied concepts of scale-up and dimensional…
Descriptors: Chemical Engineering, Undergraduate Students, Science Laboratories, Hands on Science
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Emden, Markus; Sumfleth, Elke – International Journal of Science and Mathematics Education, 2016
In recent science education, experimentation features ever more strongly as a method of inquiry in science classes rather than as a means to illustrate phenomena. Ideas and materials to teach inquiry abound. Yet, tools for assessing students' achievement in their processes of experimentation are lacking. The present study assumes a basal,…
Descriptors: Student Evaluation, Science Process Skills, Inquiry, Science Education
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Bacon, Michael E. – Physics Teacher, 2012
In this paper we investigate the speed of sound in air as a function of temperature using a simple and inexpensive apparatus. For this experiment it is essential that the appropriate end corrections be taken into account. In a recent paper the end corrections for 2-in i.d. (5.04-cm) PVC pipes open at both ends were investigated. The air column…
Descriptors: Climate, Acoustics, Science Equipment, Science Experiments
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Shanks, Ryan A.; Southard, E. Megan; Tarnowski, Laura; Bruster, Matthew; Wingate, Stacia W.; Dalman, Nancy; Lloyd, Steven A. – Bioscene: Journal of College Biology Teaching, 2011
This article describes a laboratory experience utilizing videos to engage students in hypothesis-driven experimentation in behavioral neuroscience. It provides students with an opportunity to investigate the effects of chronic methamphetamine exposure on aggression in adult mice using a resident-intruder paradigm. Instructors and students only…
Descriptors: Video Technology, Hands on Science, Laboratories, Internet
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Cloonan, Carrie A.; Andrew, Julie A.; Nichol, Carolyn A.; Hutchinson, John S. – Journal of Chemical Education, 2011
This article describes an activity that can be used as an inquiry-based laboratory or demonstration for either high school or undergraduate chemistry students to provide a basis for understanding both vapor pressure and the concept of dynamic phase equilibrium. The activity includes a simple setup to create a closed system of only water liquid and…
Descriptors: Chemistry, Inquiry, Active Learning, Science Experiments
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Davies, Tony – Primary Science, 2014
Teaching children about circuits and the way electricity works is a "tricky business" because it is invisible. Just imagine all eyes are on the teacher as he or she produces for the class what looks like a ping-pong ball and then, with a wave of their hand, the incredible happens! This wonderful white sphere begins to glow red and a…
Descriptors: Science Instruction, Elementary School Science, Electronics, Scientific Concepts
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Prigodich, Richard V. – Journal of Chemical Education, 2014
Stopped-flow kinetics techniques are important to the study of rapid chemical and biochemical reactions. Incorporation of a stopped-flow kinetics experiment into the physical chemistry laboratory curriculum would therefore be an instructive addition. However, the usual reactions studied in such exercises employ a corrosive reagent that can over…
Descriptors: Laboratory Experiments, Kinetics, Chemistry, Science Activities
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Albrecht, Birgit – Journal of Chemical Education, 2014
The Wittig reaction is one of the most useful reactions in organic chemistry. Despite its prominence early in the organic chemistry curriculum, the exact mechanism of this reaction is still under debate, and this controversy is often neglected in the classroom. Introducing a simple computational study of the Wittig reaction illustrates the…
Descriptors: Undergraduate Students, Laboratory Experiments, Computation, Organic Chemistry
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Barth, Roger; Moran, Michael J. – Journal of Chemical Education, 2014
An improved procedure for laboratory determination of the heat capacities of metals is described. The temperature of cold water is continuously recorded with a computer-interfaced temperature probe and the room temperature metal is added. The method is more accurate and faster than previous methods. It allows students to get accurate measurements…
Descriptors: Metallurgy, Scientific Methodology, Scientific Concepts, Heat
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