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Science and Mathematics Education Commons™
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Articles 31 - 60 of 97
Full-Text Articles in Science and Mathematics Education
Nature's Notebook
Iowa Science Teachers Journal
A new publication is now available to upper-elementary teachers desiring nature-centered materials and activities for classroom teaching.
Science Activities
Iowa Science Teachers Journal
Joe Abruscato and Jack Hassard have just published a booklet entitled The Whole Cosmos: Catalog of Science Activities.
Spotlighting Excellence, Dave Mccalley
Spotlighting Excellence, Dave Mccalley
Iowa Science Teachers Journal
This article begins a continuing series of personal sketches concerning recipients of the annual Iowa Academy of Science Excellence in Science Teaching Awards. In this article, the recipients of the awards in biology and elementary science teaching, Owen Primavera and Diana Brill, will be featured.
The Potential Of Wild Plants As Food Resources, J. R. K. Robson
The Potential Of Wild Plants As Food Resources, J. R. K. Robson
Iowa Science Teachers Journal
The modern world is so full of scientific wonders that we often forget to look back in history and recognize landmarks that were just as significant as the discovery of the transistor, penicillin, or the laser beam. The history of our present day food is a prime example of a phenomenon that is considered to be too mundane to be taken seriously. Yet, thousands of years ago man made a scientific discovery concerning food that made possible the growth of settlements that became our cities.
The Plant Kingdom: A New Energy Source
The Plant Kingdom: A New Energy Source
Iowa Science Teachers Journal
Besides being an energy source for themselves, plants are the ultimate energy source for all other forms of life.
Investigating Iowa's Weeds, Paul G. Jantzen
Investigating Iowa's Weeds, Paul G. Jantzen
Iowa Science Teachers Journal
The term "weed" is often defined as a plant out of place. A. C. Martin has complained that this definition reflects human bias and that pest plants are out of place only with respect to man's immediate purpose. In nature's scheme, they often serve useful functions such as providing food for wildlife throughout the growing season and covering barren soil, thus preventing soil erosion. Judging from their competitive success with many so-called desirable species, they are anything but out of place.
Compositae And So2
Iowa Science Teachers Journal
The Exxon Company employs biomonitoring to check air quality in the vicinity of some of its oil and gas installations.
Implications Of Piaget For The Everyday Laboratory Experiences Of Children, Thomas E. Allen
Implications Of Piaget For The Everyday Laboratory Experiences Of Children, Thomas E. Allen
Iowa Science Teachers Journal
In recent years, we have seen a great increase of interest in the work of Jean Piaget. Educational psychology courses and magazines for teachers feature frequent discussions about the Swiss psychologist and his research. Such discussions, however, often dwell on his descriptions of the stages of intellectual development and the cognitive abilities characteristic of each stage. Such an emphasis on classification is unfortunate because it encourages categorization of children while diverting our attention from the more important aspects of Piaget's discoveries - Piaget has analyzed the learning difficulties of many children and how children learn and, by implication, has shown …
Thomas Edison
Iowa Science Teachers Journal
Thomas Edison successfully produced rubber from goldenrod.
Ias-Aaas Incremental Investigative Grants For High School Students, Lynn W. Glass
Ias-Aaas Incremental Investigative Grants For High School Students, Lynn W. Glass
Iowa Science Teachers Journal
In an attempt to encourage Iowa high schools to provide support for investigative science activities, the Iowa Academy of Science, with the financial support of the American Association for the Advancement of Science, has created an Incremental Investigative Grant Program. These grants, beginning with the current school year, are available for appropriate scientific investigative activities by high school students working under the sponsorship of a science teacher.
Fact Or Fiction?
Iowa Science Teachers Journal
The three million tons of fertilizer Americans put on lawns and the like would more than cover South Asia's whole fertilizer deficit.
Uni Symposium
Iowa Science Teachers Journal
The University of Northern Iowa will host its fifteenth annual Science and Mathematics Symposium on November 10-11, 1977.
Intelligent Zinc
Iowa Science Teachers Journal
Recently, Professor Adon A. Gordus of the University of Michigan has been directing a study of more than 800 well-documented hair samples. Using atomic absorption spectroscopy and neutron activation, his study has uncovered some interesting correlations between academic performance and trace metal content of hair.
Annual Baby Booms : A Chi-Square Investigation, David R. Duncan, Bonnie H. Litwiller
Annual Baby Booms : A Chi-Square Investigation, David R. Duncan, Bonnie H. Litwiller
Iowa Science Teachers Journal
Scientists frequently wish to determine whether an observed distribution of data is consistent with some theoretical distribution. For example, is a given set of data normally distributed, or is a given set of data "uniformly" distributed among various categories? A statistical tool for investigating these questions is the Chi-Square statistic.
The Anti-Science Syndrome, Arthur Koestler
The Anti-Science Syndrome, Arthur Koestler
Iowa Science Teachers Journal
The average person will be reluctant to admit that a work of art is beyond his level of comprehension; but he will, in the same breath and with certain pride, confess his complete ignorance of the principles which make his radio work.
Patriotic Phenolphtalein, Joe Moore
Patriotic Phenolphtalein, Joe Moore
Iowa Science Teachers Journal
To illustrate the "patriotic nature" of phenolphthalein, prepare a dilute solution by dissolving 0.1 gm of phenolphthalein in 100 ml of ethyl alcohol and dilute with 50 ml of water.
What Makes Your Garden Grow?, Joe Moore
What Makes Your Garden Grow?, Joe Moore
Iowa Science Teachers Journal
To illustrate crystal formation, dissolve 35 ml of sodium silicate into 150 ml of water placed in a 400 ml beaker.
Officers, Iowa Academy Of Science; Editorial Staff ; Officers & Regional Directors, Iowa Science Teachers Section; Advisory & Technical Review Boards
Iowa Science Teachers Journal
No abstract provided.
The Welk Effect, Joe Moore
The Welk Effect, Joe Moore
Iowa Science Teachers Journal
To get a Niagara Falls of bubbles, place about 5 gm of manganese in 100 ml graduated cylinder, fill the cylinder three-fourths full of a "Halo" type shampoo solution and add about 5 ml of hydrogen peroxide.
Will It Work In Iowa?
Iowa Science Teachers Journal
The embankments of many Austrian highways today show on both sides of the road a new installation: game-warning reflectors which are designed to divert beams from car headlamps into the adjoining countryside. The basic idea for the installation of the reflectors has been derived from the studies of the Institute of Comparative Behavior Research in the Austrian Academy of Sciences, which concentrated on the effect on animals of "eyes" and "eye dummies."
Legislature Sees Light
Iowa Science Teachers Journal
The 1974 Iowa Legislature include, in an appropriation bill, $300,000 for a solar energy plant to partly heat and cool the State Capitol.
Energy
Iowa Science Teachers Journal
If energy was delivered to your door like milk -- today, you would have had 19 half gallons of oil, 14 half gallons of natural gas, and 46 pounds of coal on your doorstep.
Large-Scale Industrial Applications Of Solar Energy, W. C. Dickinson
Large-Scale Industrial Applications Of Solar Energy, W. C. Dickinson
Iowa Science Teachers Journal
Research on solar energy sponsored by the U.S. Research and Development Administration (ERDA), at the Lawrence Livermore Laboratory, has concentrated on finding and developing techniques that can be made economically competitive with fossil fuels and can be applied by industry on a large scale. The difficulty lies in making solar energy competitive, not in identifying large-scale application. Table 1 suggests the widespread need for large-scale applications.
A Solar Water Heater, John Bridgenell
A Solar Water Heater, John Bridgenell
Iowa Science Teachers Journal
The sketch (Fig. 1) and photograph (Fig. 2) show a very simple solar water heater made from readily available parts.
Solar Energy Society Of America
Solar Energy Society Of America
Iowa Science Teachers Journal
The Solar Energy Society of America and its publication Energies is dedicated to a broad scope of information and education in solar energy and related energy concerns and realities.
Some High School Biology Electives, James H. Meyer, Robert Nelson
Some High School Biology Electives, James H. Meyer, Robert Nelson
Iowa Science Teachers Journal
Cedar Falls High School, for many years, offered a science curriculum composed of traditional biology, chemistry, and physics courses. The percentage of students taking science courses began declining in the late 1960's, reaching a low of 573 students (out of approximately 1,500 students) in the 1972-73 school year. Since all science courses offered at the school were elective.it was concluded that some adjustment in course offerings was in order if a greater percentage of the student body was to be reached. As a result of the efforts of the science staff, five new biology courses were developed and subsequently introduced …
Household Energy Game
Iowa Science Teachers Journal
A 20-page booklet telling how to compute family energy consumption with a game grid pitting individual versus national consumption is available.
Nsta Conference
Iowa Science Teachers Journal
The NSTA Area Conference will be held in San Francisco on October 13 and 15, 1977.
Aging Iowa Trees, Roger Q. Landers
Aging Iowa Trees, Roger Q. Landers
Iowa Science Teachers Journal
How old is this tree? Or that one? Unanswerable questions to most people, unless they are there when it started growing, but with proper techniques, equipment, and a bit of skill (or luck), it is not so difficult to determine the age of a tree. Because trees grow in girth by the addition, each year, of a layer of wood just inside the inner bark, these layers can be counted when they are clearly exposed. We usually see the layers exposed as rings on the surface of a stump, hence the study of aging trees is referred to as "tree-ring" …
Iowa Landforms
Iowa Science Teachers Journal
A new publication, A Regional Guide to Iowa Landforms, is now available as the Iowa Geological Survey Educational Series 3.