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Ogilvie, C. A. – Physical Review Special Topics - Physics Education Research, 2009
Most students struggle when faced with complex and open-ended tasks because the strategies taught in schools and universities simply require finding and applying the correct formulae or strategy to answer well-structured, algorithmic problems. For students to develop their ability to solve ill-structured problems, they must first believe that…
Descriptors: Physics, Problem Solving, Learning Strategies, Teaching Styles
Akatugba, Ayo Harriet; Wallace, John – International Journal of Science Education, 2009
This study examines students' use of proportional reasoning in high school physics problem-solving in a West African school setting. An in-depth, constructivist, and interpretive case study was carried out with six physics students from a co-educational senior secondary school in Nigeria over a period of five months. The study aimed to elicit…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, High Schools, Secondary School Science, Physics
Hubisz, John – Physics Teacher, 2009
Early in my career someone else reported that the best indicator of success in calculus-based physics (CBP) at our school was whether students had taken mathematics in a certain region of New Brunswick. I sat down with a very longtime mathematics teacher and asked him what he thought students should know in mathematics after high school to succeed…
Descriptors: High Schools, Mathematics Teachers, Calculus, Physics
Ucak, C. – European Journal of Physics, 2009
A ladder network constructed by an elementary two-terminal network consisting of a parallel resistor-inductor block in series with a parallel resistor-capacitor block sometimes is said to have a non-dispersive dissipative response. This special ladder network is created iteratively by replacing the elementary two-terminal network in place of the…
Descriptors: Engineering Education, Science Instruction, Laboratory Equipment, Energy
Essen, Hanno; Apazidis, Nicholas – European Journal of Physics, 2009
We study the turning point problem of a spherical pendulum. The special cases of the simple pendulum and the conical pendulum are noted. For simple initial conditions the solution to this problem involves the golden ratio, also called the golden section, or the golden number. This number often appears in mathematics where you least expect it. To…
Descriptors: Laboratory Equipment, Mathematical Concepts, Motion, Scientific Concepts
Peer reviewedBaehr, Marie – Physics Teacher, 1994
Provides a problem where students are asked to find the point at which a soda can floating in some liquid changes its equilibrium between stable and unstable as the soda is removed from the can. Requires use of Newton's first law, center of mass, Archimedes' principle, stable and unstable equilibrium, and buoyant force position. (MVL)
Descriptors: Force, Higher Education, Mechanics (Physics), Physics
Jewett, John W., Jr. – Physics Teacher, 2008
Energy is a critical concept in physics problem-solving, but is often a major source of confusion for students if the presentation is not carefully crafted by the instructor or the textbook. A common approach to problems involving deformable or rotating systems that has been discussed in the literature is to employ the work-kinetic energy theorem…
Descriptors: Kinetics, Energy, Problem Solving, Motion
Jackson, Jane; Dukerich, Larry; Hestenes, David – Science Educator, 2008
The authors describe a Modeling Instruction program that places an emphasis on the construction and application of conceptual models of physical phenomena as a central aspect of learning and doing science. (Contains 1 table.)
Descriptors: Models, Visual Aids, Problem Solving, Teamwork
Petocz, Peter; Sowey, Eric – Teaching Statistics: An International Journal for Teachers, 2008
When people speak of "the Law of Gravity" they are generally referring to what is more specifically known as "Newton's Law of Gravitation." This law states that the gravitational force (that is, the mutual attraction) between any two physical bodies is directly proportional to the product of their individual masses and inversely proportional to…
Descriptors: Scientific Concepts, Physics, Scientific Principles, Probability
Mateycik, Frances Ann – ProQuest LLC, 2010
This research project investigates students' development of problem solving schemata while using strategies that facilitate the process of using solved examples to assist with a new problem (case reuse). Focus group learning interviews were used to explore students' perceptions and understanding of several problem solving strategies. Individual…
Descriptors: Algebra, Focus Groups, Maps, Problem Solving
Molesini, Giuseppe; Vannoni, Maurizio – European Journal of Physics, 2009
An account of peculiar light patterns produced by reflection in a pool under falling rain droplets was recently reported by Molesini and Vannoni (2008 Eur. J. Phys. 29 403-11). The mathematical approach, however, only covered the case of a symmetrical location of a light source and the observer's eyes with respect to the vertical of the falling…
Descriptors: Light, Science Instruction, Water, Scientific Principles
Pol, Henk J.; Harskamp, Egbert G.; Suhre, Cor J. M.; Goedhart, Martin J. – Computers & Education, 2009
This study investigates the effectiveness of computer-delivered hints in relation to problem-solving abilities in two alternative indirect instruction schemes. In one instruction scheme, hints are available to students immediately after they are given a new problem to solve as well as after they have completed the problem. In the other scheme,…
Descriptors: Physics, Computer Software, Problem Solving, Metacognition
Peer reviewedKorsunsky, Boris – Physics Teacher, 1995
Presents a few examples of not-so-traditional problems that can be very helpful in teaching some particular concepts or approaches in physics. Problem sets include vector addition and vector components, reference frames, and choosing the right approximations. (JRH)
Descriptors: Acceleration (Physics), Mechanics (Physics), Motion, Physics
Jewett, John W., Jr. – Physics Teacher, 2008
Energy is a critical concept in physics problem-solving but is often a major source of confusion for students if the presentation is not carefully crafted by the instructor or the textbook. The first article in this series discussed student confusion generated by traditional treatments of work. In any discussion of work, it is important to state…
Descriptors: Textbooks, Energy, Physics, Science Instruction
Knight, Randy – Physics Teacher, 2008
It's a situation every avid cyclist knows only too well. If you cycle up a hill and then back down with no net change in elevation, it seems as if your slower uphill speed and faster downhill speed should offset each other. But they don't. Your average speed is less than it would have been had you cycled the same distance on a level road.…
Descriptors: Physics, Exercise Physiology, Science Instruction, Scientific Principles

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