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Showing 1 to 15 of 199 results Save | Export
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Marx, Jeffrey – Physics Teacher, 2023
The various aspects of projectile motion have been analyzed many times in this journal. As a sample, over the years, authors have investigated particular details of the path of a projectile and different situations for launching projectiles. Others have written about a nifty way to determine the maximum height of a projectile, finding the range of…
Descriptors: Science Activities, Motion, Physics, Science Instruction
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Mungan, Carl E.; Lipscombe, Trevor C. – Physics Teacher, 2022
Problems involving chains, cables, or ropes that are dropped, folded, or pass around pulleys attract ongoing interest, in part because they can become variable-mass situations if the chain is partitioned into sections for analysis. Less attention has been paid to trying to intentionally project the end of a string as far as possible. Here we…
Descriptors: Science Instruction, Scientific Concepts, Science Activities, Motion
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Kyla Adams; Anastasia Lonshakova; David Blair; David Treagust; Tejinder Kaur – Teaching Science, 2024
Quantum science is in the news daily and engages students' interest and curiosity. A fundamental quantum science concept that underpins medical imaging, quantum computing and many future technologies is quantum spin. Quantum spin can explain many physical phenomena that are in the lower secondary school curriculum, such as magnetism and light,…
Descriptors: Quantum Mechanics, Science Instruction, Physics, Science Activities
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Owens, David C.; Greer, Kania; Thaler, Mary – Science Activities: Projects and Curriculum Ideas in STEM Classrooms, 2023
Kids are drawn to dolls and dump trucks, and crashing the two together might just be a child's favorite pastime. Who knew such a simple pleasure could serve as an accessible, compelling phenomenon for instigating investigations of force and motion. With a few inexpensive materials straight out of the toy box (literally, a doll, a dump truck, a…
Descriptors: Toys, Science Instruction, Scientific Concepts, Motion
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Sullivan, Kelley D. – Physics Teacher, 2019
The ubiquitous bouncy ball, or "superball," is an engaging child's toy that has endured for more than 50 years. But what makes a bouncy ball so uniquely suited to its name? Steel balls, for example, are more highly elastic than are butadiene bouncy balls. Yet it is butadiene balls, and not steel balls, that appear in toy stores and…
Descriptors: Science Instruction, Physics, Science Activities, Toys
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Jesús Erubiel Miguel-Gómez; Dennise Salazar; Miguel Reina – Journal of Chemical Education, 2023
Ludic-didactic material has systematically been proven to be a useful tool that enhances teaching and learning processes, at practically any educational level by reducing the stress level of students and creating a feeling of team spirit and trust. In chemistry courses, significant efforts have been made to improve the learning of intermolecular…
Descriptors: Chemistry, Science Education, Science Instruction, Teaching Methods
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Joseph, Toby – Physics Education, 2021
Problems involving rotating systems analysed from an inertial frame, without invoking fictitious forces, is something that freshman students find difficult to understand in an introductory mechanics course. In this article we try to see what could be the factors that lead to this difficulty and propose a set of arguments that could be used to…
Descriptors: Mechanics (Physics), Motion, Scientific Concepts, Introductory Courses
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Featonby, David – Physics Education, 2019
A journey through the wonderful world of spinning tops, emphasising their practical use in both amusement, skill and as part of the physics curriculum.
Descriptors: Science Instruction, Physics, Motion, Scientific Concepts
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Mungan, Carl E. – Physics Teacher, 2017
Some teenagers are exploring the outer perimeter of a castle. They notice a spy hole in its wall, across the moat a horizontal distance "x" and vertically up the wall a distance "y." They decide to throw pebbles at the hole. One girl wants to use physics to throw with the minimum speed necessary to hit the hole. What is the…
Descriptors: Physics, Science Instruction, Motion, Science Activities
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Wijaya, P. A.; Fauzi, U.; Latief F. D. E. – Physics Education, 2019
The air drag constant for different nose shapes of projectiles is determined with the help of a simple method combining a projectile launcher, video tracking technique and spreadsheet computer code for simulating the motion. A projectile launcher with low-cost components is developed to study air drag in projectile motion. The launcher is based on…
Descriptors: Physics, Measurement Equipment, Video Technology, Measurement Techniques
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Pendrill, Ann-Marie – Physics Education, 2021
Take a selection of balls and marbles along to a nearby playground slide and let students investigate factors that may influence how balls accelerate down an inclined plane. Students can make hypotheses in small groups, plan investigations to test multiple possible explanations and draw conclusions about the importance of different variables. The…
Descriptors: Physics, Motion, Science Activities, Active Learning
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Ben-Abu, Yuval; Wolfson, Ira; Yizhaq, Hezi – Physics Education, 2018
We suggest an activity for measuring the speed of a bicycle going in circular motion by measuring the bicycle's lean angle. In this activity students will be able to feel the strength that is being activated on their bodies while they are moving in circular motion. They will also understand that it is impossible to ride in a circle without the…
Descriptors: Motion, Physics, Scientific Concepts, Science Instruction
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Roemmele, Christopher; Sederberg, David – Physics Teacher, 2017
Students are better able to understand Newton's first law when they build from their own personal experiences of bicycling, skateboarding, or riding in a car. Most have experienced a tumble when their skateboard or bicycle comes to an abrupt stop. Alternately in a car, your body continues moving when the brakes are applied and you feel the force…
Descriptors: Physics, Science Instruction, Scientific Concepts, Motion
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Pössel, M. – Physics Education, 2020
Teaching cosmology at the undergraduate or high school level requires simplifications and analogies, and inevitably brings the teacher into contact with at least one of the pedagogical interpretations of the expanding Universe. The by far most popular interpretation holds that galaxies in an expanding Universe are stationary, while space itself…
Descriptors: Scientific Concepts, Concept Formation, Misconceptions, Science Instruction
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Çoban, Gul Ünal; Büber, Ayse; Saglam, Merve Kocagül – Physics Education, 2017
This paper focuses on a series of activities for students at middle school to college level, designed to instill a sound understanding of fluids and the properties of fluids. The first activities investigate diffusion and molecular size and these are followed by tasks exploring viscosity and the factors effecting viscosity. Following this, there…
Descriptors: Persuasive Discourse, Science Instruction, Molecular Structure, Science Activities
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