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Nissen, Jayson M.; Her Many Horses, Ian; Van Dusen, Ben; Jariwala, Manher; Close, Eleanor – Physics Teacher, 2022
Research-based assessments (RBAs) measure how well a course achieves discipline-specific outcomes. Educators can use outcomes from RBAs to guide instructional choices and to request resources to implement and sustain instructional transformations. One challenge for using RBAs, however, is a lack of comparative data, particularly given the skew in…
Descriptors: Physics, Science Instruction, Introductory Courses, Teaching Methods
Zhu, Guangtian; Ding, Yi; Chen, Qingwei; Huang, Yuhan – Physics Teacher, 2022
Instructional videos are commonly used in both remote and in-campus curriculum. In order to investigate students' experience when learning with online instructional videos, we adapted a method called "UX curve" from the user experience studies in industrial design. In this paper, we introduce the procedure and data processing method of…
Descriptors: Student Experience, Video Technology, Instructional Materials, High School Students
Marx, Jeffrey – Physics Teacher, 2022
For years there has been an acknowledged interest in having students assess the rationality of their solutions to physics problems. In fact, many textbooks now routinely include end-of-problem assessments as part of the authors' detailed solutions to examples. Over the past two decades, I have experimented with various forms of end-of-problem…
Descriptors: Science Instruction, Physics, Problem Solving, Evaluation Methods
Sobhanzadeh, Mandana; Zizler, Peter – Physics Teacher, 2021
In this paper, we present a selection methodology in the physics laboratory that lowers student anxiety and is beneficial to the instructors as well. At Mount Royal University, the traditional laboratory experimental exercises were replaced by a new style of laboratory called labatorials. In our previous research work, we found that labatorials…
Descriptors: Evaluation Methods, Introductory Courses, Physics, Laboratory Experiments
Madsen, Adrian; McKagan, Sarah B.; Sayre, Eleanor C. – Physics Teacher, 2020
Physics faculty care about their students learning physics content. In addition, they usually hope that their students will learn some deeper lessons about thinking critically and scientifically. They hope that as a result of taking a physics class, students will come to appreciate physics as a coherent and logical method of understanding the…
Descriptors: Science Instruction, Physics, Student Surveys, Student Attitudes
Denicoló, Glenda – Physics Teacher, 2019
Learning assessment at two-year colleges is growing, but not much has been published about it yet. In general, our smaller classrooms, diverse student population, high proportion of adjunct faculty, and academic freedom in teaching methods and tools set the stage for a different approach to assessment than at four-year institutions. This is the…
Descriptors: Community Colleges, College Faculty, Evaluation Methods, Student Evaluation
Paul, Cassandra; Potter, Wendell; Weiss, Brenda – Physics Teacher, 2014
As instructors, we want our students to develop a deep understanding of course material, and feedback is essential in their sense-making process. Providing effective individualized feedback to students in large courses is especially difficult. While researchers suggest, and many instructors of large courses are incorporating interactive techniques…
Descriptors: Science Instruction, Physics, Feedback (Response), Student Evaluation
Laverty, James T.; Bauer, Wolfgang; Kortemeyer, Gerd; Westfall, Gary – Physics Teacher, 2012
It is almost universally agreed that more frequent formative assessment (homework, clicker questions, practice tests, etc.) leads to better student performance and generally better course evaluations. There is, however, only anecdotal evidence that the same would be true for more frequent summative assessment (exams). There maybe many arguments…
Descriptors: Cheating, Homework, Guessing (Tests), Formative Evaluation
Sullivan, Dan M.; Smith, Robert W.; Kemnitz, E. J.; Barton, Kevin; Graham, Robert M.; Guenther, Raymond A.; Webber, Larry – Physics Teacher, 2010
Every student who studies atmospheric pressure in physics or chemistry learns the principles behind the construction of barometers. Cistern barometers, such as those found in most laboratories, consist of a long glass tube containing an inverted column of liquid having an open end in a cistern of the liquid. Students learn that the column of…
Descriptors: Physics, Laboratories, Scientific Concepts, Science Education
Kostov, Svilen; Hammer, Daniel – Physics Teacher, 2011
In this paper we show that with the help of accessible, teaching-quality equipment, some interesting and important details of the motion of a gyroscope, which are typically overlooked in introductory courses, can be measured and compared to theory. We begin by deriving a simple relation between the "dip angle" of a gyroscope released from rest and…
Descriptors: Introductory Courses, Motion, Equipment, Science Education
Calza, G.; Gratton, L. M.; Lopez-Arias, T.; Oss, S. – Physics Teacher, 2010
The measurement of the mass, or the density, of air can easily be done with very simple materials and offers many interesting phenomena for discussion--buoyancy and its effects being the most obvious but not the only one. Many interesting considerations can be done regarding the behavior of gases, the effect of the external conditions in the…
Descriptors: Elementary School Science, Textbooks, Scientific Concepts, Misconceptions
Blanton, Patricia – Physics Teacher, 2009
At a recent conference sponsored by the National Science Teachers Association on Professional Learning Communities in Science, I was reminded how crucial it is for teachers to continually examine their practice. As one new to teaching physics, you may be overwhelmed by the task of helping your students develop accurate understanding of the…
Descriptors: Student Evaluation, Physics, Concept Formation, Science Teachers
Messer, J.; Pantaleone, J. – Physics Teacher, 2010
The air surrounding a projectile affects the projectile's motion in three very different ways: the drag force, the buoyant force, and the added mass. The added mass is an increase in the projectile's inertia from the motion of the air around it. Here we experimentally measure the added mass of a spherical projectile in air. The results agree well…
Descriptors: Undergraduate Students, High Schools, Motion, Scientific Concepts
Van Domelen, David – Physics Teacher, 2010
Typically, we teach the simplified friction equation of the form F[subscript s] = [mu][subscript s]N for static friction, where F[subscript s] is the maximum static friction, [mu][subscript s] is the coefficient of static friction, and "N" is the normal force pressing the surfaces together. However, this is a bit too simplified, and…
Descriptors: Scientific Concepts, Physics, Science Instruction, Geometric Concepts
Sadler, Philip M.; Night, Christopher – Physics Teacher, 2010
What kinds of astronomical lab activities can high school and college astronomy students carry out easily in daytime? The most impressive is the determination of latitude and longitude from observations of the Sun. The "shooting of a noon sight" and its "reduction to a position" grew to become a daily practice at the start of the 19th century…
Descriptors: Marine Education, Astronomy, High School Students, College Students