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Showing 1,111 to 1,125 of 12,293 results
Kanderakis, Nikos Emmanouil – Science & Education, 2010
The physical magnitude "work" has a long history. It emerged when two different practices, performed during the whole eighteenth century, met each other. The first was theoretical, practiced by philosophers and mathematicians, and was related mainly to the "living forces" (vires vivae). The second was empirical, practiced by engineers, and was…
Descriptors: Educational Philosophy, Engines, Foreign Countries, Historians
Maerten-Rivera, Jaime; Myers, Nicholas; Lee, Okhee; Penfield, Randall – Science Education, 2010
This study examined both student and school predictors of science achievement as measured by a high-stakes state test. The study involved 23,854 fifth-grade students from 198 elementary schools in a large urban school district with a diverse student population. Multilevel modeling was conducted to examine both student and school predictors…
Descriptors: Urban Schools, Elementary School Science, Science Achievement, Mathematics Achievement
Maeyer, Jenine; Talanquer, Vicente – Science Education, 2010
The characterization of students' cognitive biases is of central importance in the development of curriculum and teaching strategies that better support student learning in science. In particular, the identification of shortcut reasoning procedures (heuristics) used by students to reduce cognitive load can help us devise strategies to foster the…
Descriptors: Methods Research, Heuristics, Chemistry, Teaching Methods
Lee, Victor R. – Science Education, 2010
The cause of the seasons is often associated with a very particular alternative conception: That the earth's orbit around the sun is highly elongated, and the differences in distance result in variations in temperature. It has been suggested that the standard diagrams used to depict the earth's orbit may be in some way responsible for the initial…
Descriptors: Cues, Astronomy, Climate, Scientific Concepts
Bang, Megan; Medin, Douglas – Science Education, 2010
Although there has been considerable focus on the underrepresentation of minorities in science, technology, engineering, and mathematics (STEM) disciplines and the need for science instruction that fosters diversity, much of the associated effort has focused on the goal of diversity and tended to assume that science and science learning are…
Descriptors: American Indians, Disproportionate Representation, Science Instruction, Science Education
Roth, Wolff-Michael; Van Eijck, Michiel – Science Education, 2010
Challenged by a National Science Foundation-funded conference, 2020 Vision: The Next Generation of STEM Learning Research, in which participants were asked to recognize science, technology, engineering, and mathematics (STEM) learning as lifelong, life-wide, and life-deep, we draw upon 20 years of research across the lifespan to propose a new way…
Descriptors: Reflective Teaching, Literature Reviews, Science Education, Technology Education
Bradbury, Leslie Upson – Science Education, 2010
Educative mentoring is an idea developed by Feiman-Nemser [Feiman-Nemser, S. (1998). Teachers as teacher educators. "European Journal of Teacher Education," 21(1), 63-74; (2001). Helping novices learn to teach: Lessons from an exemplary support teacher. "Journal of Teacher Education," 52(1), 17-30] to reflect current conceptions of mentoring that…
Descriptors: Mentors, Educational Change, Science Teachers, Beginning Teachers
Koballa, Thomas R., Jr.; Kittleson, Julie; Bradbury, Leslie U.; Dias, Michael J. – Science Education, 2010
Framed by sociocultural theory, the purpose of the study was to understand the cultural tools used by science teachers when leaning to mentor and how tool use may lead to the construction of new understandings about mentoring. The participants were 37 experienced teachers enrolled in a federally funded science-specific mentor preparation program.…
Descriptors: Mentors, Computer Mediated Communication, Science Teachers, Science Instruction
Ault, Charles R., Jr.; Dodick, Jeff – Science Education, 2010
For many decades, science educators have asked, "In what ways should learning the content of traditional subjects serve as the means to more general ends, such as understanding the nature of science or the processes of scientific inquiry?" Acceptance of these ends reduces the role of disciplinary context; the "Footprints Puzzle" and Oregon's…
Descriptors: Scientific Methodology, Scientific Principles, Observation, Inferences
Brooke, John Hedley – Science & Education, 2010
Much has been written on the subject of Darwinism and religion, but rather less on the development of Darwin's own thinking on religious matters and how it changed over time. What were his religious, or anti-religious, beliefs? Did he believe that his theory of evolution by natural selection was incompatible with belief in a Creator? Was it his…
Descriptors: Evolution, Religion, Cartoons, Religious Factors
Depew, David J. – Science & Education, 2010
This essay reviews key controversies in the history of the Darwinian research tradition: the Wilberforce-Huxley debate in 1860, early twentieth-century debates about the heritability of acquired characteristics and the consistency of Mendelian genetics with natural selection; the 1925 Scopes trial about teaching evolution; tensions about race,…
Descriptors: Evolution, Genetics, Essays, Debate
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
Lyons, Sherrie Lynne – Science & Education, 2010
Thomas Huxley more than anyone else was responsible for disseminating Darwin's theory in the western world and maintained that investigating the history of life should be regarded as a purely scientific question free of theological speculation. The content and rhetorical strategy of Huxley's defense of evolution is analyzed. Huxley argued that the…
Descriptors: Evolution, Biology, Philosophy, Science Instruction
Cooke, Bill – Science & Education, 2010
Joseph McCabe (1867-1955) was one of the most prolific and gifted polymaths of the twentieth century. Long before such a thing was thought respectable, and almost a century before any university established a chair in the public understanding of science, McCabe made a living as a populariser of science and a critic of philosophical and religious…
Descriptors: Evolution, Science and Society, Religion, Criticism
Heywood, Leslie L.; Garcia, Justin R.; Wilson, David Sloan – Science & Education, 2010
Although Darwinism has gained a foothold in the social sciences, in the humanities, with a few exceptions, it is still largely rejected--not, as some would claim, because humanists are all radical poststructuralists who deny that material reality exists, but rather because, with notable exceptions, Darwinists who work within the humanities have…
Descriptors: Models, Scientific Methodology, Social Sciences, Humanities

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