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Showing 46 to 60 of 106 results Save | Export
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Anderegg, William R. L. – Thought & Action, 2010
In the scrum of popular and political discourse on global warming, the scholarship of climate science is often left sitting on the sideline. Yet understanding the science and the scientists presents the best chance of developing an informed opinion about climate change. Confusion about the science, misunderstanding of risk assessment and…
Descriptors: Expertise, Opinions, Risk Management, Identification
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Shallcross, Dudley E.; Martin, Damien – School Science Review, 2011
Perfluorocarbons (PFCs) are fully fluorinated hydrocarbons that are used as blood plasma substitutes, in medical imaging and in the cosmetics industry. Most are inert and can also be used as tracers for applications such as air flow. However, because of their C-F bonds and their longevity in the atmosphere, PFCs have large global warming…
Descriptors: Climate, Ventilation, Foreign Countries, Measurement
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Bruno, Barbara C.; Tice, Kimberly A.; Puniwai, Noelani; Achilles, Kate – Science Scope, 2011
Ocean acidification is one of the most serious environmental issues facing the planet (e.g., Doney 2006; Guinotte and Fabry 2009). It is caused by excess carbon dioxide (CO[subscript 2]) in the atmosphere. Human activities such as burning fossil fuels put CO[subscript 2] and other heat-trapping gases into the atmosphere, which causes the Earth's…
Descriptors: Fuels, Earth Science, Marine Biology, Climate
Resnick, Helaine E.; Sawyer, Keegan; Huddleston, Nancy – National Academies Press, 2015
Does the public trust science? Scientists? Scientific organizations? What roles do trust and the lack of trust play in public debates about how science can be used to address such societal concerns as childhood vaccination, cancer screening, and a warming planet? What could happen if social trust in science or scientists faded? These types of…
Descriptors: Trust (Psychology), Science and Society, Scientific Attitudes, Scientists
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Yastibas, Ahmet Erdost – Acta Educationis Generalis, 2020
Introduction: The earth has entered a new geological epoch: the Anthropocene. The Anthropocene demonstrates how human activities have changed the world negatively by causing several environmental issues such as global warming. Therefore, it has become an important problem for people. Education should be reconsidered according to the new epoch to…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, English (Second Language), Second Language Instruction, Grade 5
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Dempsey, Chris; Bodzin, Alec; Anastasio, David; Sahagian, Dork; Cirucci, Lori – Science Scope, 2012
One of the most alarming impacts of projected climate change is a significant rise in sea level. Sea level has varied by hundreds of meters over geologic time, yet these changes have generally been slow paced, allowing ecosystems to adjust to changing land surface and marine habitats. Since the Industrial Revolution, anthropogenic emissions have…
Descriptors: Climate, Environmental Education, Geology, Science Instruction
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Mazzatenta, Claudio – American Biology Teacher, 2008
Bronx Community College (CUNY) launched "Global Warming Campus Awareness and Action Days" in celebration of Earth Day, 2007. The purpose of this program was to raise awareness of environmental issues in the college population, especially students. To let more students have a grasp of what Environmental Education (EE) is all about, the author…
Descriptors: Environmental Education, Climate, College Students, Consciousness Raising
Monastersky, Richard – Chronicle of Higher Education, 2007
For the past three years, leading scientists from more than 40 countries have been conducting a physical of the planet. They have monitored its vital signs, probed its parts, taken its temperature, measured its bodily fluids. This article deals with the global-warming report for the United Nations released by a panel of 1,200 scientists at a news…
Descriptors: Scientists, Climate, Human Geography
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Oppenheimer, Michael; Anttila-Hughes, Jesse K. – Future of Children, 2016
Michael Oppenheimer and Jesse Anttila-Hughes begin with a primer on how the greenhouse effect works, how we know that Earth is rapidly getting warmer, and how we know that the recent warming is caused by human activity. They explain the sources of scientific knowledge about climate change as well as the basis for the models scientists use to…
Descriptors: Climate, Sciences, Evidence, Causal Models
Bralower, Timothy J.; Feiss, P. Geoffrey; Manduca, Cathryn A. – Liberal Education, 2008
As the research interests and the focus of traditional earth scientists are transformed, so too must education in earth system science at colleges and universities across the country change. The required change involves not only the methods used to teach this new science, but also the essential place of the earth sciences in the panoply of…
Descriptors: College Curriculum, Environmental Education, Politics of Education, Climate
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Beedle, Harold; Calhoun, Bruce – Social Education, 2009
As the world increasingly comes to terms with the reality of global warming, international negotiators are struggling to work out the terms of a new climate change framework to be finalized this December in Copenhagen, Denmark. One aspect being discussed is a plan to compensate developing countries for reducing greenhouse gas emissions by…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Climate, Pollution, Environmental Standards
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Kershaw, Baz – Research in Drama Education, 2012
This article is based on a paper first presented at the Performance Studies international annual conference on Performing Rights at Queen Mary, University of London, 2006. It has been rewritten specially for this themed issue of "RiDE" in light of my research following publication of "Theatre Ecology: Environments and Performance…
Descriptors: Performance, Ecology, Climate, Development
Curriculum Review, 2008
This article presents an interview with Kathleen M. Reilly, author of "Planet Earth: 25 Environmental Projects You Can Build Yourself." Environmental awareness needs to begin in childhood, and, through this book, Kathleen M. Reilly encourages children to learn about ecology and ecosystems to begin conservation early in their lives. Children ages 9…
Descriptors: Conservation (Environment), Environmental Education, Ecology, Natural Resources
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Tsurusaki, Blakely K.; Anderson, Charles W. – International Journal of Environmental and Science Education, 2010
This research draws on developments in educational research where "learning progressions" are emerging as a strategy for synthesizing research on science learning and applying that research to policy and practice, and advances in the natural sciences, where "interdisciplinary research on coupled human and natural systems" has become increasingly…
Descriptors: Science and Society, Relevance (Education), Science Curriculum, Elementary Secondary Education
Bardeen, Tara – Instructor, 2007
Global warming affects every living thing on Earth--people, plants, and animals. While scientists are working to better understand how the Earth's climate will change over time, some effects are already evident: rising sea levels, shrinking glaciers and polar ice caps, changes in the distribution of plants and animals, increases in intense…
Descriptors: Natural Resources, Scientists, Conservation (Environment), Energy
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