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Showing 46 to 60 of 141 results Save | Export
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Stolberg, Tonie L. – Science & Education, 2010
This article examines what science education might be able to learn from phenomenological religious education's attempts to teach classes where students hold a plurality of religious beliefs. Recent statements as to how best to accomplish the central pedagogical concept of "learning from religion" as a vehicle for human transformation are…
Descriptors: Evolution, Religious Education, Science Teachers, Religious Factors
Buckworth, Jenny – Australian Association for Research in Education (NJ1), 2012
One of the key challenges for education in Northern Australia is attracting and recruiting teachers who can respond to the challenges of the region at the start of their careers through professional experience in the region. For pre-service students in regional locations such as the Northern Territory these challenges include coping with the…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Teacher Recruitment, Coping, Social Isolation
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Borgerding, Lisa A. – Science Educator, 2012
High school biology teachers face many challenges as they teach evolution. State standards for evolution may provide support for sound evolution instruction. This study attempts to build upon previous work by investigating teachers' views of evolution standards and their evolution practices in a state where evolution standards have been…
Descriptors: Evidence, Evolution, State Standards, Genetics
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Brandt, Danita – Journal of Geoscience Education, 2009
2009 marked the bicentennial of Charles Darwin's birth (February 12) and the 150th anniversary (in November) of the publication of Darwin's "extended abstract" "On the Origin of Species by Natural Selection." Universities, scientific societies, and disciplinary journals anticipated this event by organizing meetings, theme…
Descriptors: Earth Science, Recognition (Achievement), Evolution, Scientific Principles
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Ostergaard, Edvin – Journal of Aesthetic Education, 2011
Two of the most influential works of the Western nineteenth century were completed in 1859: Charles Darwin's "The Origin of Species" and Richard Wagner's opera "Tristan and Isolde." Although created within very different cultural traditions, these works show some striking similarities: both brought about a critical, long-lasting debate and caused…
Descriptors: Evolution, Biology, Books, Opera
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Ruse, Michael – Science & Education, 2010
As biologists have recognized since Aristotle, there are two complementary ways of looking at organisms: one can think of them from the viewpoint of homology, asking about the isomorphisms between different organisms and even within the organisms themselves; or one can think of them from the viewpoint of adaptation or final cause, asking about the…
Descriptors: Evolution, Biology, Essays, Chemistry
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Burghardt, Gordon M. – American Psychologist, 2009
Charles Darwin made numerous seminal contributions to the study of animal behavior over his long career. This essay places these contributions in the context of Darwin's life, showing his long-standing interest in psychological and behavioral issues encompassing all species, including humans. Ten areas are highlighted: natural history;…
Descriptors: Animals, Animal Behavior, Ecology, Psychology
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Slee, June – Higher Education Quarterly, 2010
In an earlier paper, Slee and Keenan demonstrated that it was possible for tertiary education institutions to design culturally responsive assessment procedures that complied with standardised assessment policy. The authors' paper described "Growing Our Own," an initiative between Charles Darwin University and Northern Territory Catholic…
Descriptors: Student Evaluation, Teacher Qualifications, Foreign Countries, Values
Bramschreiber, Terry L. – ProQuest LLC, 2013
Even 150 years after Charles Darwin published "On the Origin of Species," public school teachers still find themselves dealing with student resistance to learning about biological evolution. Some teachers deal with this pressure by undermining, deemphasizing, or even omitting the topic in their science curriculum. Others face the…
Descriptors: Science Education, Science Instruction, Evolution, Science Teachers
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Mamtora, Jayshree – Australian Academic & Research Libraries, 2011
Due to the increase in research activity at Charles Darwin University in recent years, the Library created the position of Research Services Coordinator to meet researcher needs. Eighteen months after the new staff member was in place, an online survey was carried out to gauge the success of the new services and resources provided, and thereby…
Descriptors: Evaluation, Focus Groups, Foreign Countries, Library Services
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Burns, John T.; Scurti, Paul J.; Furda, Amy M. – American Biology Teacher, 2009
This article discusses why the study of earthworms has fascinated many scientists, and why earthworms make ideal experimental animals for students to test in the laboratory. Although earthworms may appear to be primitive, they are governed by both circadian and seasonal rhythms, just as more advanced organisms are. They possess an intelligence…
Descriptors: Science Fairs, Science Laboratories, Science Instruction, Entomology
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Moorcroft, Heather – Australian Academic & Research Libraries, 2009
Despite the stereotype of libraries as peaceful retreats, unacceptable behaviour is a reality that desk staff have to deal with. This paper outlines the results of two surveys conducted at Charles Darwin University Library to investigate the extent to which this is a problem in Australian academic libraries. The first survey went to CAUL (Council…
Descriptors: Academic Libraries, Behavior Problems, Library Personnel, Surveys
Stepath, Carl M. – Online Submission, 2007
Background: "Environmental education in the Galapagos: 2007 report to the Charles Darwin Foundation" is a report to the Charles Darwin Foundation (CDF) about the researchers observations about the status of environmental education in the Galapagos in 2006 and 2007. Purpose: This paper reports on environmental education in the Galapagos…
Descriptors: Environmental Education, Foreign Countries, Qualitative Research, Interviews
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la Velle, Linda – Journal of Biological Education, 2009
Ask most men or women in the street who Charles Darwin was and the chances are that they will know something of the work he did: the work that has revolutionised our understanding of the living world and our place in it. The 200th centenary of his birth was in February 2009. Over the 150 years since the publication of his seminal work On the…
Descriptors: Educational Resources, Electronic Libraries, Evolution, Web Sites
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Hess, Ursula; Thibault, Pascal – American Psychologist, 2009
In his book "The Expression of the Emotions in Man and Animals," Charles Darwin (1872/1965) defended the argument that emotion expressions are evolved and adaptive (at least at some point in the past) and serve an important communicative function. The ideas he developed in his book had an important impact on the field and spawned rich domains of…
Descriptors: Infants, Nonverbal Communication, Evolution, Psychological Patterns
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