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Showing 91 to 105 of 201 results Save | Export
Walsh, Kate; Jacobs, Sandi – National Council on Teacher Quality, 2009
In late July, the U.S. Department of Education released a notice of draft priorities and requirements for applying for "Race to the Top" funding, $4.35 billion in competitive federal grants. This new pot of money dwarfs any previous discretionary funding from the education department, even though it constitutes the smallest piece of…
Descriptors: Teacher Effectiveness, Educational Change, Grants, Public Education
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Jerrard, Richard P.; Wetzel, John E. – College Mathematics Journal, 2008
A stopper is called "universal" if it can be used to plug pipes whose cross-sections are a circle, a square, and an isosceles triangle, with the diameter of the circle, the side of the square, and the base and altitude of the triangle all equal. Echoing the well-known result for equal cubes that is attributed to Prince Rupert, we show that it is…
Descriptors: Geometric Concepts, Geometry, Mathematics Instruction, College Mathematics
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Wilson, Arthur L. – New Directions for Adult and Continuing Education, 2009
This article discusses three broad themes--reflection, power, and negotiation--that are evidenced in all of the articles in this issue. In this article, the author tries to transgress the articles at some middling altitude to seek some broader thematics. His observations about reflection, power, and negotiation do transcend individual efforts,…
Descriptors: Adult Learning, Ethics, Educational Practices, Reflection
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Mungan, Carl E. – Physics Teacher, 2009
A pair of masses or opposite-sign charges released from rest will move directly toward each other under the action of the inverse-distance-squared force of attraction between them. An exact expression for the separation distance as a function of time can only be found by numerically inverting the solution of a differential equation. A simpler,…
Descriptors: Astronomy, Calculus, Physics, Science Instruction
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Folk, G. Edgar – Advances in Physiology Education, 2010
The war contributions of the Harvard Fatigue Laboratory in Cambridge, MA, were recorded in 169 Technical Reports, most of which were sent to the Office of the Quartermaster General. Earlier reports were sent to the National Research Council and the Office of Scientific Research and Development. Many of the reports from 1941 and later dealt with…
Descriptors: Weather, Research and Development, Scientific Research, Fatigue (Biology)
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McMinn, David; Rowe, David A.; Cuk, Ivan – Research Quarterly for Exercise and Sport, 2012
Low levels of physical activity and an associated rise in obesity prevalence in adults and children are causes for concern. One approach to increasing daily physical activity levels is through active commuting to work or school. The recent interest in promoting active commuting necessitates an accurate and feasible method to measure ambulatory…
Descriptors: Physical Activity Level, Physical Activities, Obesity, Evaluation
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Micale, Biagio; Pennisi, Mario – International Journal of Mathematical Education in Science and Technology, 2005
In this article quadrilaterals with concurrent maltitudes are characterized. A generalization of the maltitudes is given, and a larger family of quadrilaterals for which an analogous property of concurrency holds is determined and studied.
Descriptors: Mathematics, Geometric Concepts, Computer Software, Plane Geometry
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Stearns, Richard G.; Corgan, James X. – Journal of Geoscience Education, 2010
Between 1817 and 1838 professors at the University of Pennsylvania, South Carolina College, Yale College, and Columbia College published six syllabi for earth science courses. All stressed geology. These syllabi give unique insight into classrooms of almost 200 years ago. The greatest difference between the six syllabi involved historical geology.…
Descriptors: Geology, Course Descriptions, Change Agents, Profiles
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Hancock, Gregory R. – Measurement: Interdisciplinary Research and Perspectives, 2009
As Rupp and Templin (2008) stated directly, diagnostic classification methods "are confirmatory in nature." Methods, though, are neither inherently confirmatory nor exploratory. Diagnostic classification modeling, with its analytical and computational obstacles eventually yielding as a comprehensive and potent discipline emerges, will…
Descriptors: Structural Equation Models, Test Items, Models, Diagnostic Tests
Noble, Bruce J.; Maresh, Carl M. – Research Quarterly, 1979
In general, basketball players with moderately high aerobic power who reside at an altitude of 1,000 m do not display the hypoxic response to an altitude of 2,200 m expected of sea level residents and aerobically trained athletes. (JD)
Descriptors: Aerobics, Athletes, Basketball, Cardiovascular System
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Madden, Sean P.; Comstock, Jocelyn M.; Downing, James P. – Mathematics Teacher, 2006
This article describes how a series of lessons might be used to allow students to discover the size of the Earth, the distance to the Moon, the size of the Moon, and the altitude of Mount Piton on the Moon. Measurement with a sextant, principles of geometry and trigonometry, and historically important scientists and mathematicians are discussed.
Descriptors: Learning Activities, Class Activities, Astronomy, Mathematics
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Bangsbo, Ellen – Educational Review, 2008
For children of Tibetan nomadic ("drokpa") families, it is often a struggle to attend school. The long distance from home to school, irrelevance of school learning to daily life and available jobs after graduation contribute to the choice by some parents to keep their children at home for domestic work. Although some parents consider…
Descriptors: Community Schools, Rural Areas, Values, Sino Tibetan Languages
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Eichner, Edward R. – Physician and Sportsmedicine, 1986
Sickle cell trait is generally benign and does not shorten life, but it may confer some small risk with extremes of exercise or altitude. Research concerning these risks is presented, and it is concluded sickle cell trait is no barrier to outstanding athletic performance. (Author/MT)
Descriptors: Athletes, Environmental Influences, Exercise, Risk
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Peckham, Susanne – Tech Directions, 2009
This article features the team of students from Madison (Wisconsin) West High School who took first place in the Seventh Annual Team America Rocketry Challenge (TARC), earning the title of national champion. The four-member team--Jacqui German, Tenzin Sonam, John Schoech, and Ben Winokur--spent several months perfecting their design after the…
Descriptors: Scholarships, High Schools, Aerospace Education, Science Careers
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Kang, Yoonhwan; Bae, Saebyok – European Journal of Physics, 2007
We analyse the two-dimensional motions of the rockets for various types of rocket thrusts, the air friction and the gravitation by using a suitable representation of the rocket equation and the numerical calculation. The slope shapes of the rocket trajectories are discussed for the three types of rocket engines. Unlike the projectile motions, the…
Descriptors: Engines, Equations (Mathematics), Motion, Physics
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