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Giulia Polverini; Bor Gregorcic – Physical Review Physics Education Research, 2024
The well-known artificial intelligence-based chatbot ChatGPT-4 has become able to process image data as input in October 2023. We investigated its performance on the test of understanding graphs in kinematics to inform the physics education community of the current potential of using ChatGPT in the education process, particularly on tasks that…
Descriptors: Computer Software, Artificial Intelligence, Visual Impairments, Graphs
Coqueiro Rodrigues, Rojans; Cardozo Dias, Penha Maria – Physics Teacher, 2022
In high school, and also in introductory physics courses in higher levels of schooling, the law of universal gravitation of planets is introduced by postulating Johannes Kepler's three laws, and later Isaac Newton's law of the inverse of the square of the distance to the Sun. The justification of the laws is only achieved in advanced courses in…
Descriptors: Scientific Principles, Astronomy, Motion, Physics
Elaine Christman; Paul Miller; John Stewart – Physical Review Physics Education Research, 2024
This study proposes methods of reporting results of physics conceptual evaluations that more fully characterize the range of outcomes experienced by students with differing levels of prior preparation, allowing for more meaningful comparison of the outcomes of educational interventions within and across institutions. Factors leading to variation…
Descriptors: Physics, Science Instruction, College Entrance Examinations, Calculus
Hitier, Mathilde; González-Martín, Alejandro S. – International Journal of Research in Undergraduate Mathematics Education, 2022
Of the many disciplines that rely on calculus, physics is among those with the strongest connections to this branch of mathematics. For instance, the derivative--one of the key notions of calculus--is used to describe velocity and acceleration, which play a central role in mechanics. In post-secondary education, in particular at the college level,…
Descriptors: Calculus, Physics, Motion, Scientific Concepts
Padyala, Radhakrishnamurty – Physics Teacher, 2020
The family of paths of ideal projectiles shot from a point with a common value of speed and at different angles to the horizontal has several interesting properties associated with it. For example, Chapou et al. have shown that an ellipse passes through the apexes of these parabolic paths. This observation encouraged us to further explore this…
Descriptors: Physics, Motion, Mechanics (Physics), Science Instruction
Lozovenko, O.; Minaiev, Yu; Lutai, R. – Physics Education, 2022
The purpose of this publication is to present a novel approach to the demonstration of the Dzhanibekov effect. The main idea of our version is to use a lightweight spinning top of a spherical external form but distinct principal moments of inertia floating in the upward flow of air. As a result, the Dzhanibekov effect can be easily demonstrated…
Descriptors: Science Instruction, Teaching Methods, Physics, Scientific Principles
Bellavia, Landon – Physics Teacher, 2021
In traditional introductory physics courses, concepts of distance, displacement, speed, velocity, scalars, and vectors are generally taught near the beginning of the course. However, students often contend with preexisting notions, such as the idea that speed and velocity are synonyms, which present some of the first conceptual hurdles that they…
Descriptors: Literary Genres, Motion, Physics, Teaching Methods
Minkin, Leonid; Sikes, Daniel – Physics Teacher, 2021
This article analyzes and experimentally verifies the stability behavior of the equilibrium states of a conical pendulum. An analysis of the motion presents that the equilibrium states of the pendulum are determined by the pendulum angular speed. For a given pendulum length there exists a critical angular speed that determines stability…
Descriptors: Physics, Science Instruction, Teaching Methods, Motion
Cross, Rod – Physics Education, 2021
Points near the top end of a falling rod hinged at its bottom end can fall faster than g. If a rod falls on a frictionless surface then the bottom end slides backwards and the centre of mass falls vertically with acceleration less than g. The effect was simulated by mounting a rod on wheels and filming the result with a video camera. The…
Descriptors: Physics, Science Instruction, Teaching Methods, Video Technology
Larnder, Chris I. – Physics Teacher, 2021
Today's students are increasingly immersed in a landscape of screens and handheld digital devices through which a good deal of their interactions with the world around them are mediated. Physics educators, meanwhile, continue to rely on traditional human interactions with the physical world, such as sliding down a ramp or throwing a baseball, in…
Descriptors: Physics, Science Instruction, Teaching Methods, Computer Peripherals
Pendrill, Ann-Marie – Physics Education, 2020
Students often use incoherent strategies in their problem solving involving force and motion, as revealed, e.g. when they are asked to draw force diagrams for amusement rides involving circular motion, whether in horizontal or vertical planes. Depending on the questions asked, assignments involving circular motion can reveal different types of…
Descriptors: Science Instruction, Physics, Motion, Scientific Concepts
El Idrissi, Abdallah; Calabrese, Dominic; Hickox, Tyler – Physics Teacher, 2020
For many years, Atwood's machine has been used to demonstrate, illustrate, or verify Newton's laws in introductory physics courses. It consists of two objects of different mass that are fastened to the ends of a string that hangs over a pulley. In an idealized situation, one assumes that pulley friction, the string's mass, and changes in the…
Descriptors: Science Instruction, Physics, Teaching Methods, Equipment
Robertson, Amy D.; Goodhew, Lisa M.; Heron, Paula R. L.; Scherr, Rachel E. – Physics Teacher, 2022
Perhaps the most commonly cited student idea about forces in the literature is the notion of an impetus force, defined as the "belief that there is a force inside a moving object that keeps it going and causes it to have some speed," that can then "fade away as the object moves along." According to the literature, even after…
Descriptors: Physics, Science Instruction, Motion, Freehand Drawing
Deneault, Ethan A.-N. – Physics Teacher, 2022
To a student in introductory physics, using vectors is at best an exercise in bookkeeping. A two-dimensional kinematics problem effectively doubles the number of equations that a student must know, and invites the student to memorize factoids: "The horizontal motion is constant," "Gravity is only in the y-direction," etc. Force…
Descriptors: Physics, Introductory Courses, Science Instruction, Motion
David Argudo; Talise Oh – European Journal of Physics Education, 2022
When deriving the equation describing the transverse motion of a one-dimensional vibrating elastic string, introductory physics textbooks often assume constant tension and/or small amplitude vibrations. However, these simplifying assumptions are not only unnecessary, but they overlook the elastic nature of the tension and yield an inconsistent…
Descriptors: Undergraduate Students, Physics, Science Instruction, Teaching Methods