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Showing 1 to 15 of 48 results Save | Export
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Kiatgamolchai, Somchai – Physics Teacher, 2015
It is well known that heat transfer between two objects results in a positive change in the total entropy of the two-object system. The second law of thermodynamics states that the entropy change of a naturally irreversible process is positive. In other words, if the entropy change of any process is positive, it can be inferred that such a process…
Descriptors: Heat, Thermodynamics, Science Instruction, Scientific Principles
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Schultz, Madeleine; Callahan, Damien L.; Miltiadous, Anna – Journal of Chemical Education, 2020
The closure of campuses in early 2020 due to the COVID-19 pandemic meant that scheduled practical activities for introductory chemistry students could not take place. The first practical class started prior to shutdown, and 21.5% of the students undertook the face-to-face offering. The remainder completed an online offering consisting of the same…
Descriptors: Hands on Science, Home Study, Chemistry, Science Activities
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Moyer, Richard H.; Everett, Susan A. – Science Scope, 2012
While ice is usually referred to as ice cubes, indeed, most are not really cubes at all. In this 5E learning-cycle lesson, students will investigate different shapes of ice and how shape affects the speed of melting and the rate of cooling a glass of water. Students will compare three different shapes of ice with the same volume but different…
Descriptors: Scientific Concepts, Elementary Secondary Education, Demonstrations (Educational), Science Instruction
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Boylan, Brandon M.; Ehrlander, Mary F.; Bouffard, Troy J. – Journal of Political Science Education, 2021
Challenges to the Arctic region abound and intersect. Warming, ice and permafrost melting, and pollution jeopardize health and food security of Indigenous and other Northern communities. Problems related to natural resource extraction and shipping are developing. Because these issues cross sovereign boundaries, they must be addressed…
Descriptors: Governance, Interdisciplinary Approach, Natural Resources, Teamwork
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Gillette, Brandon; Hamilton, Cheri – Science Scope, 2011
Explore how melting ice sheets affect global sea levels. Sea-level rise (SLR) is a rise in the water level of the Earth's oceans. There are two major kinds of ice in the polar regions: sea ice and land ice. Land ice contributes to SLR and sea ice does not. This article explores the characteristics of sea ice and land ice and provides some hands-on…
Descriptors: Climate, Misconceptions, Climate Control, Class Activities
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Hunter-Doniger, Tracey – Art Education, 2020
The children born between the years 1995 and 2005 belong to Generation Z (Gen Z). They are inheriting a world full of technology, "fake news," melting polar ice caps, and a divisive political situation in the United States. The children of Gen Z are the first generation to grow up in a world with mass technology, and they are also the…
Descriptors: Personal Autonomy, Advocacy, Art Education, Teaching Models
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Bochnícek, Zdenek – Physics Education, 2014
The two independent methods of measurement of the mass of ice created at sudden solidification of supercooled water are described. One is based on the calorimetric measurement of heat that is necessary for melting the ice and the second interprets the volume change that accompanies the water freezing. Experimental results are compared with the…
Descriptors: Science Instruction, Physics, Water, Science Experiments
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Todd, Sharon – Journal of Philosophy of Education, 2020
This paper explores education as a context for facing what Susie Orbach has termed 'climate sorrow' and asks: what 'relations to the world' are we imagining might help youth stay with difficult feelings about the future by enabling them to develop a living relationship to the more-than-human world in the present? By way of response, the paper…
Descriptors: Aesthetics, Climate, Grief, Ecology
Wood, Lorelei – ProQuest LLC, 2013
Chemistry as a subject is difficult to learn and understand, due in part to the specific language used by practitioners in their professional and scientific communications. The language and ways of representing chemical interactions have been grouped into three modes of representation used by chemistry instructors, and ultimately by students in…
Descriptors: Chemistry, Science Instruction, Teaching Methods, Scientific Concepts
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Campbell, Brian; Bindschadler, Robert – Science Teacher, 2009
By studying Antarctica via satellite and through ground-truthing research, we can learn where the ice is melting and why. The Landsat Image Mosaic of Antarctica (LIMA), a new and cutting-edge way for scientists, researchers, educators, students, and the public to look at Antarctica, supports this research and allows for unprecedented views of our…
Descriptors: Class Activities, Learning Activities, Science Teachers, Foreign Countries
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Hoover, Barbara G. – Science and Children, 1998
Describes several science activities designed around the upcoming Winter Olympics ice skating events which demonstrate the scientific principles behind the sport. Students learn that increasing the pressure on ice will lead to the ice melting, the principle involved in the spinning swing, and the technology of skates and skating outfits. (PVD)
Descriptors: Athletic Equipment, Demonstrations (Science), Elementary Education, Hands on Science
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Brady, John B. – Journal of Geoscience Education, 1992
Measurement of the compositions and temperatures of H2O-NaCl brines in equilibrium with ice can be used as an easy in-class experimental determination of a liquidus. This experiment emphasizes the symmetry of the behavior of brines with regard to the minerals ice and halite and helps to free students from the conceptual tethers of one-component…
Descriptors: Chemistry, Demonstrations (Science), Experiential Learning, Geology
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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
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Science Teacher, 2005
The current warming trends in the Arctic may shove the Arctic system into a seasonally ice-free state not seen for more than one million years, according to a new report. The melting is accelerating, and researchers were unable to identify any natural processes that might slow the deicing of the Arctic. "What really makes the Arctic different…
Descriptors: Oceanography, Climate, Scientists, Marine Education
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Untersteiner, Norbert – Oceanus, 1986
Discusses: (1) the physics of ice formation; (2) growth, melting, and regrowth of ice; (3) ice distribution; (4) ice movement; (5) the marginal ice zone; and (6) observations of ice dynamics. (JN)
Descriptors: Geophysics, Higher Education, Oceanography, Physics
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