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Showing 1,051 to 1,065 of 1,642 results Save | Export
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Tatina, Robert; Hohn, Kevin – American Biology Teacher, 1994
Uses diagrams to aid in describing a simple, rapid technique for staining the nuclei of pollen grains that have been germinated in vitro. (ZWH)
Descriptors: Plants (Botany), Science Activities, Science Education, Science Instruction
Young, Darrell D. – Pathways to Outdoor Communication, 1996
Describes plants commonly found in residential areas that can be used for making tea: chicory, chickweed, red clover, goldenrod, gill-over-the-ground, pineapple weed, plantain, self-heal, sheep sorrel, and wild strawberry. Includes proper plant name, areas where the plant grows, identifying plant features, what part is used in making tea, and tea…
Descriptors: Habitats, Outdoor Education, Plant Identification, Plants (Botany)
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Mandler, Jean M.; McDonough, Laraine – Developmental Psychology, 1998
Five experiments tested the development of conceptual categories by familiarizing infants to objects in a category and presenting them with an object in a different category. Infants' responses indicated that infants at 7 to 11 months categorized animals, vehicles, and furniture; at 11 months, plants and kitchen utensils; and at 9 to 11 months,…
Descriptors: Animals, Classification, Concept Formation, Furniture
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Wolfe, Edward W.; Dozier, Hallie – Journal of Applied Measurement, 2000
Developed an instrument to measure invasive plant environmentalism (knowledge and attitudes concerning non-native plant invasions). Scaled responses of 237 plant nursery customers to a 17-item standardized interview using the partial credit model. Results indicate that the instrument measured the construct of invasive plant environmentalism…
Descriptors: Adults, Attitude Measures, Environment, Knowledge Level
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Ben-Ari, Elia T. – Bioscience, 1999
Discusses how botanical artists blend science and aesthetics. (CCM)
Descriptors: Aesthetics, Environmental Education, Higher Education, Illustrations
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Coffman, Margaret; Peggy, Liggit – Science and Children, 2005
Just imagine the excitement in the classroom when Johnny Appleseed strides in. Barefoot and dressed in a burlap sack, he-well, actually, it's you dressed up as Johnny-wears a tin pan for a hat and smiles as he relates the reason for his visit. Fall is apple season, and he's here to explain how all the beautiful fall apples were produced. The story…
Descriptors: Biological Sciences, Science Education, Class Activities, Plants (Botany)
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Booth, Bibi – Science and Children, 2005
Amber is the fossilized resin of now-extinct trees, primarily ancient conifers but also some flowering tropical trees. An aromatic, soft, sticky substance, resin in extinct trees probably served the same purposes as resin in modern trees: to protect the plant by sealing cuts and by excluding bacteria, fungi, and insects.
Descriptors: Plants (Botany), Biological Sciences, Science Activities, Science Instruction
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West, Donna – Science Scope, 2004
Teaching plant growth to seventh-grade life science students has been interesting for the author because she grew up in a rural area and always had to help in the garden. She made many assumptions about what her rural and suburban students knew. One year she decided to have them grow plants to observe the roots, stems, leaves, flowers, and fruit…
Descriptors: Plants (Botany), Biological Sciences, Science Activities, Science Instruction
Oliver, Phillip – Library Journal, 2004
Exotic, captivating, and seductive, orchids have long fascinated plant lovers. They first attracted the attention of Westerners in the 17th century, when explorers brought back samples from South America and Asia. By the mid-1800s, orchid collecting had reached a fever pitch, not unlike that of the Dutch tulip craze of the 1630s, with rich (and…
Descriptors: College Libraries, Public Libraries, Library Materials, Plants (Botany)
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Jenkins, Ronald L.; Howell, W. Mike; Davenport, L. J.; Wood, Linda F. – American Biology Teacher, 2003
Photography makes an easy and excellent tool for teaching field biology courses, allowing students to study nature without harming it. This photographic technique is used in capturing images of vertebrates, invertebrates, and plants during class field trips, then making these images available for students to identify and study from a departmental…
Descriptors: Field Trips, Photography, Biology, Animals
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Boyd, Amy E. – American Biology Teacher, 2006
Applying botanical knowledge to a simulated forensic investigation provides inquiry-based and problem-based learning in the botany classroom. This paper details one such forensic investigation in which students use what they have learned about plant morphology and anatomy to analyze evidence and solve a murder mystery. (Contains 1 table.)
Descriptors: Teaching Methods, Persuasive Discourse, Investigations, Problem Based Learning
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Prokop, Pavol; Prokop, Matel; Tunnicliffe, Sue Dale – Journal of Biological Education, 2007
The study examines the interests and attitudes of school students toward biology: through their interest in out-of-school activities and their attitude towards lessons as measured by interest, importance and difficulty. Biology lessons were relatively popular with the greatest preference found among students learning zoology. Girls showed…
Descriptors: Student Attitudes, Females, Plants (Botany), Biology
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Briten, Elizabeth – Primary Science Review, 2006
The exciting world of plants may be something of a mystery to many children, and the often-dry content of a curriculum taught indoors inhibits real understanding of many complex biological processes. Moving outdoors opens up an unexplored world and presents rich opportunities for imaginative learning. The "Life processes and living…
Descriptors: Science Instruction, Science Activities, Foreign Countries, Creativity
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Goulder, Raymond; Scott, Graham – Journal of Biological Education, 2006
This paper describes how second/third year undergraduates with little prior botanical knowledge, attending a one-week field course in Western Scotland, were enabled to complete within one day an intensive phytosociological exercise. They showed that two stands of heathland vegetation were objectively different through identification of plants,…
Descriptors: Plants (Botany), Botany, Foreign Countries, Undergraduate Students
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Aiyeloja, A. A.; Bello, O. A. – Educational Research and Reviews, 2006
Research was carried out on the ethnobotanical potentials of common herbs in Nigeria using Enugu State as a case study. A total of 200 questionnaires were administered on herb sellers in major herb markets in the state. In all, 96 different plant species were encountered in the markets. Attempts were made to write the names of the species both in…
Descriptors: Afro Asiatic Languages, Plants (Botany), Foreign Countries, Case Studies
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