Dr. Michael P. Marlow This is Me
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The University of Colorado at Denver
Denver, Colorado
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This profile was automatically generated using 11 references found on the Internet. This information has not been verified. Learn more...
This profile was automatically generated using 11 references found on the Internet. This information has not been verified. Learn more...
View all 11 references Web References
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1. novationsjournal.org
novationsjournal.org/content/a - [Cached]Published on: 12/22/2007 Last Visited: 12/22/2007
Michael P. Marlow
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Michael P. Marlow is currently associate professor of science education at the University of Colorado at Denver. He has been involved in numerous science field projects involving teachers in doing authentic research. He also leads the Inquiry Science Doctoral Lab, which is a team of doctoral students and university professors functioning as a research team on science teachers' professional development. He can be reached at mike.marlow@cudenver.edu.
Preferred citation
Marlow, M. P., & Kyed, S. V. (2004). -
2. Index
novationsjournal.org/content/p - [Cached]Published on: 12/22/2007 Last Visited: 12/22/2007
Michael P. Marlow
...
Michael P. Marlow is currently associate professor of science education at the University of Colorado at Denver. He has been involved in numerous science field projects involving teachers in doing authentic research. He also leads the Inquiry Science Doctoral Lab, which is a team of doctoral students and university professors functioning as a research team on science teachers' professional development. He can be reached at mike.marlow@cudenver.edu.
Preferred citation
Marlow, M. P., & Kyed, S. V. (2004). -
3. African Cichlids: Lake Victoria => Mystery cichlid
www.africancichlids.net/forums - [Cached]Published on: 1/1/2003 Last Visited: 5/9/2006
I received 6 of them in 1999 from Dr. Mike Marlow, a professor at the University of COlorado, Colorado this is the information he gave me. He said they are Haplochromis sp. "Salmon" and their location and lake collected from is Hippo Point, and Lake Victroia. The females are a silver color and will display black stripes when aggressive or mating. The males are a bright orange--red-orange color and will display vertical stripes very predominatly when aggressive and mating. Dr. Marlow worked with a man from the Kenya Marine Fisheries research Institute to bring these fish back to Denver and use them with his Education classes.

