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Torcal-Milla, Francisco Jose – Physics Education, 2022
Diffraction refers to a kind of optical phenomena which occurs when light approaches an element (object or aperture) whose features are in the range of the illuminating wavelength (small apertures, sharp edges). It can be explained by means of the undulatory nature of light or also geometrically by using simple ray optics. Diffraction phenomena…
Descriptors: Light, Optics, Experiments, Class Activities
Cipparrone, Flavio A. M.; Beccaro, Wesley; Kaiser, Walter – IEEE Transactions on Education, 2020
Contribution: A didactic methodology, based on analytical expressions and experimental validation, to describe the process of abrupt current interruption in a series RL circuit, that considers real passive components and uses a toggle switch as disconnecting device. Background: In undergraduate courses, circuits adopted in transient analysis…
Descriptors: Undergraduate Study, Electronics, Equipment, Models
Flórez, Rigoberto; Mukherjee, Antara – PRIMUS, 2020
We describe some classic experiments on the Möbius strip, the projective plane band, and the Klein bottle band. We present our experience with freshmen college students, college teachers, high school students, and Mathematics Education graduate students. These experiments are designed to encourage readers to learn more about the properties of the…
Descriptors: Mathematics Instruction, College Mathematics, Secondary School Mathematics, Undergraduate Study
Benitti, Fabiane Barreto Vavassori – Informatics in Education, 2018
Learning Object (LO) is one of the main research topics in the e-learning community in the recent years. In this context, granularity is a key factor for LO reuse. This paper presents a methodology to define the learning objects granularity in the computing area as well as a case study in software testing. We carried out five experiments to…
Descriptors: Methods, Case Studies, Computer Software Evaluation, Resource Units
Hodgson, Ashley – Journal of Economic Education, 2014
Adverse selection as it relates to health care policy will be a key economic issue in many upcoming elections. In this article, the author lays out a 30-minute classroom experiment designed for students to experience the kind of elevated prices and market collapse that can result from adverse selection in health insurance markets. The students…
Descriptors: Health Insurance, Economics Education, Class Activities, Experiments
Vernengo, Jennifer; Purdy, Caitlin; Farrell, Stephanie – Chemical Engineering Education, 2014
This paper describes a biomedical engineering experiment that introduces students to rheology. Healthy and sickle-cell blood analogs are prepared that are composed of chitosan particles suspended in aqueous glycerol solutions, which substitute for RBCs and plasma, respectively. Students study flow properties of the blood analogs with a viscometer…
Descriptors: Science Instruction, Chemical Engineering, Scientific Concepts, Concept Formation
Martinez-Roman, Javier; Perez-Cruz, Juan; Pineda-Sanchez, Manuel; Puche-Panadero, Ruben; Roger-Folch, Jose; Riera-Guasp, Martin; Sapena-Baño, Angel – IEEE Transactions on Education, 2015
Undergraduate courses in electrical machines often include an introduction to their magnetic circuits and to the various magnetic materials used in their construction and their properties. The students must learn to be able to recognize and compare the permeability, saturation, and losses of these magnetic materials, relate each material to its…
Descriptors: Undergraduate Study, Equipment, Engineering Education, Magnets
Rietzschel, Eric F.; Nijstad, Bernard A.; Stroebe, Wolfgang – Creativity Research Journal, 2014
The basic assumption of brainstorming is that increased quantity of ideas results in increased generation as well as selection of creative ideas. Although previous research suggests that idea quantity correlates strongly with the number of good ideas generated, quantity has been found to be unrelated to the quality of selected ideas. This article…
Descriptors: Creativity, Correlation, Brainstorming, College Students
Gerhardt, Ira – PRIMUS, 2015
An experiment was conducted over three recent semesters of an introductory calculus course to test whether it was possible to quantify the effect that difficulty with basic algebraic and arithmetic computation had on individual performance. Points lost during the term were classified as being due to either algebraic and arithmetic mistakes…
Descriptors: Mathematics Instruction, College Mathematics, Undergraduate Study, Calculus
Shipman, Barbara A.; Shipman, Patrick D. – PRIMUS, 2013
We study situations in introductory analysis in which students affirmed false statements as true, despite simple counterexamples that they easily recognized afterwards. The study draws attention to how simple counterexamples can become hidden in plain sight, even in an active learning atmosphere where students proposed simple (as well as more…
Descriptors: College Mathematics, Undergraduate Study, Mathematics Instruction, Misconceptions
Balkenborg, Dieter; Kaplan, Todd; Miller, Timothy – Journal of Economic Education, 2012
The hold-up problem is central to the theory of incomplete contracts. This can occur if, after making a sunk investment in a relationship, one party can be taken advantage of by the other party, leading to inefficient underinvestment. The authors describe a simple teaching experiment that illustrates the hold-up problem, and address how to…
Descriptors: Economics Education, Contracts, Experiments, Class Activities
RayChaudhuri, Barun – European Journal of Physics, 2011
This work demonstrates an experiment on the optoelectronic properties of a p-n junction suitable for students of undergraduate physics. It investigates, from an educational point of view, the origin of the wavelength of radiation emitted by a light emitting diode (LED) and determines the emission wavelength of an infrared LED without using…
Descriptors: Physics, Radiation, Laboratories, Science Instruction
Gray, Jennifer B. – Communication Teacher, 2014
The subject of research methods is often unknown, foreboding, and unappealing to undergraduate communication majors. Thus, in the research methods course, two ways to overcome such issues and achieve learning are by: (1) making the unfamiliar more familiar and accessible; and (2) placing abstract knowledge in its useful real-world context. Making…
Descriptors: Research Methodology, Methods Courses, Learning Activities, Research Design
Helseth, L. E. – European Journal of Physics, 2011
We propose a simple and fascinating experiment for studying diffusion in gels using a pH-sensitive dye. By doping agar with methyl red, we obtain a gel which rapidly reacts to changes in pH by changing its absorption spectrum. The pH gradients can be followed using a digital camera, and we demonstrate here that the pH-sensitive colour changes can…
Descriptors: Photography, Chemistry, Experiments, Visual Stimuli
Ocaya, R. O.; Luhanga, P. V. C. – European Journal of Physics, 2011
It is shown that the well-known linear variation of p-n diode terminal voltage with temperature at different fixed forward currents allows easy and accurate determination of the semiconductor ideality factor and bandgap from only two data points. This is possible if the temperature difference required to maintain the same diode voltage drop can be…
Descriptors: Physics, Laboratories, Climate, Undergraduate Study