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John Burk

Download The Universe - 1 views

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    great site with sciecne e-book reviews.
John Burk

5 things about inquiry class « Teach. Brian. Teach. - 0 views

  • Students in inquiry often think its “cheating” to go look online for information, or they think I want them to completely disregard information they look up. I don’t think they need to go look up information, but I’m happy if they do. Really, I just want them to treat ideas they read online no differently than they do ideas they hear from class. Those ideas are subject to our scrutiny, to our questioning; and we should concern ourselves with whether those ideas help us to build an explanation, or whether those ideas are merely providing scientific jargon.
John Burk

Science teacher: The electric slide - 0 views

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    great post describing energy. 
John Burk

Homework Presentation Rubric V1 « Science Learnification - 0 views

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    interesting rubric for presenting high level problems in 3rd yr qm class. 
John Burk

Colleges looking beyond the lecture - The Washington Post - 0 views

  • The lecture backlash signals an evolving vision of college as participatory exercise. Gone are the days when the professor could recite a textbook in class. The watchword of today is “active learning.” Students are working experiments, solving problems, answering questions — or at least registering an opinion on an interactive “smartboard” with an electronic clicker.
  • A new biology course had 22 freshmen fan out across campus last fall for dirt samples, from which each student culled a new and heretofore unknown virus. Now, the class has picked one virus for genetic mapping.
  • Not all the ideas are new. At the University of Maryland College Park, engineering professors eliminated introductory lecture courses in 1991. Since then, students have spent the crucial first year engaged in actual engineering, building swing sets, helicopters and hovercrafts.
John Burk

Colleges looking beyond the lecture - The Washington Post - 0 views

  • The lecture backlash signals an evolving vision of college as participatory exercise. Gone are the days when the professor could recite a textbook in class. The watchword of today is “active learning.” Students are working experiments, solving problems, answering questions — or at least registering an opinion on an interactive “smartboard” with an electronic clicker.
John Burk

I Taught My Dog to Whistle - 0 views

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    7th grade life science teacher in central wisconsin
John Burk

dy/dan » Blog Archive » [3ACTS] Joulies - 0 views

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    great multimedia experiment on Joulies coffee warmers. 
John Burk

Great idea for mitosis/meiosis/transcription/translation/synthesis - 0 views

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    great idea--have students make stop motion movie animating various biological processes. 
John Burk

MythBusters: The Gentleman Scientist : Video : Discovery Channel - 1 views

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    great video of Adam Savage explaining Fizeau's measuremnt of the speed of light. 
John Burk

Women in physics: A tale of limits | Print Edition - Physics Today - 0 views

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    very interesting article on women in physics based on survey of 15K respondents. 
John Burk

Science Fair advice « Gas station without pumps - 0 views

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    great science fair advice from bioinformatics professor & judge
John Burk

More science fair advice « Gas station without pumps - 0 views

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    great science fair advice from a bioinformatics prof & judge
John Burk

Measurements and Uncertainties versus Significant Digits or Significant Figures - 1 views

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    awesome reference on uncertainty
John Burk

Embracing The Challenges Of Science Education : 13.7: Cosmos And Culture : NPR - 0 views

  • I never let my students forget that pairing of difficulty with results, because I never forget it. I let them know they are engaged in a sacred task that connects them to millennia of human effort encoded in their genes. If they can fight their way to the truth, the truth will make them free, just as it did for me that day in high school physics.
  • To engage with the world in search of any kind of Truth is an expression of the search for excellence. That, by its very nature, is desperately difficult. There will always be a price to be paid in time, sweat and tears. We should never sugarcoat that reality.
  • We want to teach students more than just how to get jobs, we also want to teach them how to live with depth and for purposes that stretch beyond their own immediate interests. We should never forget that connection. If we do, we are in danger of losing more than just the next generation of science majors.
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