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Aok, Yoki; Yawata, Kazushi – Physics Teacher, 2022
A new system for tracking a metal ball rolling on the slope of the touch panel of a tablet computer was developed. The widespread introduction of tablets in educational environments allows the use of a convenient dynamic measurement in schools.
Descriptors: Science Experiments, Measurement Techniques, Motion, Handheld Devices
Dorsel, Dominik; Staacks, Sebastian; Heinke, Heidrun; Stampfer, Christoph – Physics Teacher, 2022
As smartphones have become a part of our everyday life, their sensors have successfully been used to allow data acquisition with these readily available devices in a variety of different smartphone-based school experiments. Such experiments most commonly take advantage of the accelerometer and gyroscope. A less frequently used sensor in…
Descriptors: Handheld Devices, Measurement Equipment, Science Experiments, Navigation
SeHee Jung; Hanwen Wang; Bingyi Su; Lu Lu; Liwei Qing; Xiaolei Fang; Xu Xu – TechTrends: Linking Research and Practice to Improve Learning, 2025
This study presents a mobile application (app) that facilitates undergraduate students to learn data science using their own full-body motion data. The app captures a user's movements through the built-in camera of a mobile device and processes the images for data generation using BlazePose, an open-source computer vision model for real-time pose…
Descriptors: Undergraduate Students, Data Science, Handheld Devices, Open Source Technology
Marranghello, Guilherme Frederico; Lucchese, Márcia Maria; da Rocha, Fábio Saraiva – Physics Teacher, 2022
Water rockets can be used in a variety of ways, from schools to planetariums, with very young kids or adults. We propose here simple forms to work with water rockets, going one step further than a simple launch. A smartphone can be used to film the launch and analyze its motion with video analysis or it can even be attached to the rocket, using…
Descriptors: Physics, Video Technology, Science Instruction, Water
Namchanthra, Witchayaporn; Puttharugsa, Chokchai – Physics Teacher, 2021
Nowadays, electronic devices (especially smartphones) are developed to use as an alternative tool for recording experimental data in physics experiments. This is because of the embedded sensors in a smartphone such as the accelerometer, gyroscope, magnetometer, camera, microphone, and speaker. These sensors were used in physics experiments, such…
Descriptors: Physics, Handheld Devices, Measurement Equipment, Motion
Shakur, Asif; Binz, Steven – Physics Teacher, 2021
The use of smartphones in experimental physics is by now widely accepted and documented. PASCO scientific's Smart Cart, in combination with student-owned smartphones and free apps, has opened a new universe of low-cost experiments that have traditionally required cumbersome and expensive equipment. In this paper, we demonstrate the simplicity,…
Descriptors: Handheld Devices, Science Experiments, Physics, Computer Oriented Programs
Kaps, A.; Starmach, F. – Physics Teacher, 2020
Smartphones and their internal sensors offer new options for an experimental access to teach physics at secondary schools and universities. Especially in the field of mechanics, a number of smartphone-based experiments are known illustrating, e.g., linear and pendulum motions as well as rotational motions using the internal MEMS accelerometer and…
Descriptors: Physics, Handheld Devices, Measurement Equipment, Mechanics (Physics)
Kaps, Andreas; Splith, Tobias; Stallmach, Frank – Physics Teacher, 2021
Implementing smartphones with their internal sensors into physics experiments represents a modern, attractive, and authentic approach to improve students' conceptual understanding of physics. In such experiments, smartphones often serve as objects with physical properties and as digital measurement devices to record, display, and analyze…
Descriptors: Telecommunications, Handheld Devices, Technology Uses in Education, Science Experiments
Herrera-Suárez, H. J.; Morales-Aranguren, H. L.; Muñoz, J. H.; Ossa-Novoa, J. – Physics Education, 2022
The oscillations of one mass "m" suspended between two different springs, assuming a friction force proportional to the velocity [minuscule], have been studied. For this purpose, an assembly for this system has been made. The movement of the mass is recorded with a smartphone and analysed with "Tracker." It is obtained that the…
Descriptors: Mechanics (Physics), Motion, Energy, Science Instruction
Goev, Gosho; Velinov, Tzvetan – Physics Education, 2022
In this paper, we propose a simple yet generic and versatile method to measure the position of a moving body as a function of time. Apart from very basic equipment such as carts and wheels, only a laser pointer or a similar device and a smartphone are necessary. By attaching a source of light to a cart and video filming its movement on a…
Descriptors: Measurement Techniques, Science Instruction, Motion, Physics
Jaana Juutinen; Sara Margrét Ólafsdóttir; Johanna Einarsdóttir – Scandinavian Journal of Educational Research, 2024
This study explores how children construct their belonging in culturally diverse early childhood settings in Finland and Iceland. Belonging is understood as a holistic phenomenon that is constructed through various relations. The study is a multiple-case study, influenced by ethnographic approaches, conducted with children in two preschool…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Early Childhood Education, Multicultural Education, Student Diversity
Salinas, Isabel; Monteiro, Martín; Martí, Arturo C.; Monsoriu, Juan A. – Physics Teacher, 2020
In this article, the dynamics of a traditional toy, the yo-yo, are investigated theoretically and experimentally using smartphone sensors. In particular, using the gyroscope the angular velocity is measured. The experimental results are complemented thanks to a digital video analysis. The concordance between theoretical and experimental results is…
Descriptors: Toys, Handheld Devices, Telecommunications, Physics
Canassa, T. A.; Freitas, W. P. S.; Ferreira, J. V. B.; Goncalves, A. M. B. – Physics Education, 2020
We propose an experimental analogy to verify Kepler's second law using a spherical pendulum. We made a movie of a closed elliptical orbit of the pendulum and extracted the data position using the Tracker software. Analyzing the data, we measured the areas that the position vector sweeps showing the validity of Kepler's second law.
Descriptors: Scientific Principles, Motion, Physics, Science Experiments
Priyanto, Aan; Yusmantoro; Aji, Mahardika Prasetya – Physics Teacher, 2020
When we travel in a train moving at a certain velocity, we observe the stationary objects outside are moving backwards. These stationary objects seem to move due to a relative velocity. Consider that the stationary object outside the train is a man standing on the stationary floor watching a woman moving on a train. The woman on a train will see…
Descriptors: Telecommunications, Handheld Devices, Motion, Physics
Chua, Yu Wei; Lu, Szu-Ching; Anzulewicz, Anna; Sobota, Krzystof; Tachtatzis, Christos; Andonovic, Ivan; Rowe, Philip; Delafield-Butt, Jonathan – Developmental Science, 2022
Movement is prospective. It structures self-generated engagement with objects and social partners and is fundamental to children's learning and development. In autistic children, previous reports of differences in movement kinematics compared to neurotypical peers suggest that its prospective organisation might be disrupted. Here, we employed a…
Descriptors: Autism, Pervasive Developmental Disorders, Motion, Handheld Devices