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Showing 8,446 to 8,460 of 1,555,717 results
Van Camp, Debbie; Baugh, Stacey-Ann – Teaching of Psychology, 2014
An increasing number of publishers offer online companion websites that students pay to access with the expectation that using these will significantly increase their grade. This research assessed the students' attitudes toward and the efficacy of components of MyPsychLab, a companion site for Introduction to Psychology. Students reported…
Descriptors: Textbooks, Psychology, Student Attitudes, College Students
Stanovich, Keith E.; West, Richard F. – Teaching of Psychology, 2014
In this article the authors argue that distinguishing between rationality and intelligence helps explain how people can be, at the same time, intelligent and irrational (Stanovich, 2009). As such, researchers need to study separately the individual differences in cognitive skills that underlie intelligence and the individual differences in…
Descriptors: Intelligence, Responses, Cognitive Processes, Intelligence Quotient
Lane, Lisa M. – History Teacher, 2014
History Professors and instructors have a lot to do. They are supposed to "cover content," introducing students to the main events in history. They also need to teach skills, such as historical thinking, source evaluation, argument construction, and research techniques. Particular "student learning outcomes" or assessments are…
Descriptors: History, History Instruction, Discussion (Teaching Technique), Primary Sources
Swanson, Ryan A. – History Teacher, 2014
This study emphasizes an often overlooked avenue of inquiry in the increasingly escalating textbook debate: What is the relationship between the instructor, the students, and the assigned text? And correspondingly, how does one go about analyzing this crucial relationship? Over the past two years, Ryan Swanson gathered data from 549 students in…
Descriptors: Textbooks, College Faculty, College Students, Higher Education
Ruiz, Michael J. – Physics Teacher, 2014
End-pipe corrections seldom come to mind as a suitable topic for an introductory physics lab. Yet, the end-pipe correction formula can be verified in an engaging and inexpensive lab that requires only two supplies: plastic-tube toys called boomwhackers and a meter-stick. This article describes a lab activity in which students model data from…
Descriptors: Introductory Courses, Physics, Laboratory Experiments, Science Activities
Brown, Todd – Physics Teacher, 2014
Although nuclear half-life is vital to physics and physical science, and to sensitive societal issues from nuclear waste to the age of the Earth, a true lab on half-life is almost never done at the college or high school level. Seldom are students able to use radioactivity to actually date when an object came into being, as is done in this…
Descriptors: Physics, Science Experiments, Spectroscopy, Primary Sources
Whitworth, Brooke A.; Chiu, Jennifer L.; Bell, Randy L. – Physics Teacher, 2014
Creating investigations that allow students to see physics in their everyday world and to be kinesthetically active outside of the traditional physics classroom can be incredibly engaging and effective. The investigations we developed were inquiry investigations in which students engaged in concrete experiences before we discussed the abstract…
Descriptors: Investigations, Physics, Classroom Techniques, Kinesthetic Methods
Conti, Rosaria; Gallitto, Aurelio Agliolo; Fiordilino, Emilio – Physics Teacher, 2014
We propose an experiment for investigating how objects cool down toward the thermal equilibrium with their surroundings. We describe the time dependence of the temperature difference of the cooling objects and the environment with an exponential decay function. By measuring the thermal constant t, we determine the convective heat-transfer…
Descriptors: Science Instruction, Physics, Thermodynamics, Heat
Corrao, Christian T. – Physics Teacher, 2014
A challenge: Can you create a stable top from a single paper clip? Several interesting solutions to this problem were provided by Takao Sakai from Japan, the requirement of each being that the center of gravity be located on the vertical y-axis at the center of the top. In the simplest configuration, we see that there exists a single angle ?…
Descriptors: Science Instruction, Physics, Science Activities, Scientific Concepts
Willis, Courtney – Physics Teacher, 2014
I first met Steve Iona 40 years ago at a Denver Area Physics Teachers meeting. Steve had recently completed bachelor's and master's degrees in mathematics from the University of Chicago. Being a Colorado native, he was interested in returning to Colorado to teach. Steve had some rather high-powered recommendations, including one from a…
Descriptors: Science Instruction, Science Teachers, Physics, Profiles
Gaughan, Judy E. – History Teacher, 2014
The flipped Classroom is one in which lectures are presented as homework outside of class in online videos so that class time is reserved for engaging directly with the materials. This technique offers more personalized guidance and interaction with students, instead of lecturing. In this article, Judy Gaughan details her journey through choosing…
Descriptors: World History, History Instruction, Multimedia Materials, Multimedia Instruction
Singh, Vandana – Physics Teacher, 2014
The unfortunate negative attitude toward physics among many students, including science majors, warrants creative approaches to teaching required physics courses. One such approach is to integrate science fiction into the curriculum, either in the form of movies or the written word. Historically this has been done since at least the 1970s, and by…
Descriptors: Science Fiction, Evidence, Classroom Techniques, Physics
Sobel, Michael – Physics Teacher, 2014
In a recent paper, Kasar, Yurumezoglu, and Sengoren show how to use a guitar, or two guitars, to demonstrate resonance. Here we extend this idea by showing how to use a guitar or a piano (both acoustic) to demonstrate resonance, harmonics, and the properties of the musical scale. We discuss the advantages and disadvantages of each instrument.…
Descriptors: Musical Instruments, Science Instruction, Scientific Concepts, Demonstrations (Educational)
Poynor, Adele – Physics Teacher, 2014
In 2009, President Obama proposed an initiative to decrease our country's energy consumption and dependence on fossil fuels. One key to this plan was to decrease the amount of energy used to heat and cool our homes through government incentives. The EPA estimates that the average American household spends over $1000 annually for heating and…
Descriptors: Equipment, Electronics, Energy Conservation, Conservation (Environment)
Planinšic, Gorazd; Etkina, Eugenia – Physics Teacher, 2014
LEDs, or light-emitting diodes, are cheap, easy to purchase, and thus commonly used in physics instruction as indicators of electric current or as sources of light (Fig. 1). In our opinion LEDs represent a unique piece of equipment that can be used to collect experimental evidence, and construct and test new ideas in almost every unit of a general…
Descriptors: Science Instruction, Physics, Light, Energy

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