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1 May 2010 Sectioning Clay Models Makes Anatomy & Development Tangible
Carina Endres Howell, James Endres Howell
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Abstract

Clay models have proved to be useful teaching aids for many topics in biology that depend on three-dimensional reasoning. Students studying embryonic development struggle to mentally reconstruct the three-dimensional structure of embryos and larvae by observing prepared slides of cross-sectional slices. Students who build clay models of embryos and slice them into cross sections, however, have a much easier time interpreting the slices of real embryos and gain a deeper understanding of development in three dimensions.

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Carina Endres Howell and James Endres Howell "Sectioning Clay Models Makes Anatomy & Development Tangible," The American Biology Teacher 72(5), 313-314, (1 May 2010). https://doi.org/10.1525/abt.2010.72.5.12
Published: 1 May 2010
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KEYWORDS
body axes
cross section
embryogenesis
hands-on activity
modeling
vertebrate development
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