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Eurich, Chris; Fields, Peter A.; Rice, Elizabeth – American Biology Teacher, 2012
Proteomics is an emerging area of systems biology that allows simultaneous study of thousands of proteins expressed in cells, tissues, or whole organisms. We have developed this activity to enable high school or college students to explore proteomic databases using mass spectrometry data files generated from yeast proteins in a college laboratory…
Descriptors: Biology, Biochemistry, Science Instruction, Databases
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Krupa, James J. – American Biology Teacher, 2005
In this article, the author first provides the history of the wedding rice myth. He then details an interactive class activity that involved students in his large, non-majors biology classes. These students developed a series of experiments that scientifically determined if rice could be harmful to birds. Finally, he provides suggestions on how…
Descriptors: College Students, Biology, Science Instruction, Nonmajors
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Odell, Rice – American Biology Teacher, 1978
Discusses the problems of population growth and space utilization, acquisition of land, and planning for rural areas. Techniques available for achieving a physically open society with fewer problems of living space are enumerated. (Author/MA)
Descriptors: Environmental Education, Futures (of Society), Land Use, Living Standards
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Rice, Stanley – American Biology Teacher, 1999
Describes an activity that addresses some fundamental principles of scaling, a technique that provides a mathematical basis for explaining many biological differences between small and large organisms. (WRM)
Descriptors: Biology, Higher Education, Mathematical Models, Scaling
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Hummer, Paul J., Jr. – American Biology Teacher, 1993
Provides instructions for teachers and students to culture protozoans for use in science laboratories. Sections include setting up a culture area, basic culture media, amoeba culture technique, powdered milk-wheat-rice medium, alfalfa medium, and uses of the protozoa in the laboratory. (PR)
Descriptors: Biology, High Schools, Laboratory Procedures, Microbiology
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Rice, Stanley A.; McArthur, John – American Biology Teacher, 2004
A study was conducted to prove that a large blood or xylem vessel could conduct 256 times more fluid than a vessel or a pipe that is four times smaller. The result of this study proved that if arteriosclerosis causes an artery to loose half its effective diameter, the blood flow would be reduced by fifteen-sixteenths.
Descriptors: Mechanics (Physics), Metabolism, Human Body, Diseases
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Rice, Stanley A.; Maness, Ian B. – American Biology Teacher, 2004
A technique to measure the potency of leaf compounds against herbivores with the use of a bioassay is described. Bioassays are useful in classes where students have career plans like medicine in which bioassays can be used as tools for screening plants for possible medicinal potency.
Descriptors: Science Activities, Teaching Methods, Botany, Plants (Botany)
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Rice, Stanley A.; Griffin, Jennifer R. – American Biology Teacher, 2004
Hornworms are good assay organisms for leaf toxins, and can be raised on an artificial medium ("chow"), consisting of corn meal, soy flour, dry milk, yeast and other additives and preservatives. The hornworm assay is less useful in ecological and toxicological research, but is very useful in learning about experimental design and hypothesis…
Descriptors: Research Design, Hypothesis Testing, Toxicology, Microbiology