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Muller, Eric – Physics Teacher, 2019
What do you get when you cross a rubber band with a photocopier? You get a whole series of physics lessons and some great images! It's easy to get this activity up and running, be amazed, and apply it to any number of scientific concepts. It lends itself to a whole host of investigations. This easy-to-do activity can also be aligned to NGSS…
Descriptors: Physics, Science Instruction, Science Activities, Reprography
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Keller, Philip – Physics Teacher, 2019
Before students learn Kirchhoff's rules, they are typically taught how to solve "combined series-parallel" circuits. The method presented in many textbooks begins by drawing a series of simplified circuits, replacing series and/or parallel elements with their equivalent resistances, eventually reducing the circuit to a voltage source and…
Descriptors: Physics, Equipment, Energy, Problem Solving
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Polácek, Luboš; Jurmanová, Jana; Navrátil, Zdenek – Physics Education, 2019
A pair of galvo mirrors reflecting light from a laser pointer is suggested for use as a school demonstration of Lissajous figures. The device is small, cheap and easy to assemble. Combined with a two-channel waveform generator, a full spectrum of excellently stable Lissajous figures can be generated (concerning frequency ratio, amplitude ratio and…
Descriptors: Physics, Lasers, Scientific Concepts, Science Equipment
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Foo, Patrick; Ruiz, Michael J. – Physics Education, 2019
Students preparing to enter medical fields are required to take physics. To increase their interest in physics, a low-cost classroom medical activity is presented introducing them to the basics of endoscopic visualization and navigation. Incorporated in the activity are basic surgical techniques such as resection with single or multiple operators.…
Descriptors: Physics, Medical Education, Science Activities, Visual Aids
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Touitou, Israel; Barry, Stephen; Bielik, Tom; Schneider, Barbara; Krajcik, Joseph – Science Teacher, 2018
Project-based learning (PBL) is an instructional approach to science teaching that supports the "Next Generation Science Standards" (Krajcik 2015; NGSS Lead States 2013). In a PBL lesson, students design and solve real-world problems or explain scientific phenomena. Students using a PBL model learn and retain more than those not using…
Descriptors: Active Learning, Student Projects, Physics, Units of Study
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Parikesit, Gea O. F. – Physics Education, 2014
Shadows can be found easily everywhere around us, so that we rarely find it interesting to reflect on how they work. In order to raise curiosity among students on the optics of shadows, we can display the shadows in 3D, particularly using a stereoscopic set-up. In this paper we describe the optics of stereoscopic shadows using simple schematic…
Descriptors: Physics, Optics, Student Motivation, Science Activities
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Rosengrant, David – Physics Teacher, 2011
Multiple representations are a valuable tool to help students learn and understand physics concepts. Furthermore, representations help students learn how to think and act like real scientists. These representations include: pictures, free-body diagrams, energy bar charts, electrical circuits, and, more recently, computer simulations and…
Descriptors: Science Activities, Visual Aids, Physics, Science Instruction
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Stephenson, Philip; Warwick, Paul – Physics Education, 2002
Reviews the use of concept cartoons in support of the constructivist view of learning, and gives two particular examples to show how they can help students' understanding of the formation of shadows. (Author/MM)
Descriptors: Cartoons, Constructivism (Learning), Elementary Secondary Education, Light
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Chandler, David – Physics Teacher, 1991
Two computer-generated star charts that can be used as overlay transparencies to show an expanding universe are presented. Directions on how to use the star charts to determine the Hubble constant and the age of the universe are provided. (KR)
Descriptors: Astronomy, Physics, Problem Solving, Science Activities
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Hughson, Robert C. – Physics Teacher, 1974
Descriptors: Audiovisual Instruction, College Science, Instrumentation, Laboratory Experiments
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Campbell, Thomas C. – Physics Teacher, 1977
Discusses the laboratory portion of a beginning noncalculus physics course that uses concrete examples of abstract concepts. Describes the use of coffee cans to explain oscillations and plastic darts to illustrate collisions. (MLH)
Descriptors: College Science, Concept Teaching, Equipment, Higher Education
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Eckroth, Charles A. – Physics Teacher, 1993
This article describes a teaching aid made from four colored foam balls mounted on a stiff wire circle used to teach about the changing seasons and earth temperature fluctuations. The spheres represent the Earth at the solstice and equinox positions. (MVL)
Descriptors: Astronomy, Demonstrations (Educational), Earth Science, Physics
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Gagnon, Richard – Physics Teacher, 1979
A description of an apparatus for demonstrating the trajectory of a charged particle, is given. A photograph of the equipment used in the demonstrations accompanies the text. (SA)
Descriptors: College Science, Demonstrations (Educational), Higher Education, Instructional Materials
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Kolb, Doris, Ed. – Journal of Chemical Education, 1989
Presents two demonstrations using the overhead projector: (1) describes how to build a projecting voltmeter and presents uses for the classroom; and (2) investigates the color of fluorescent solutions by studying the absorption and transmission of light through the solutions. (MVL)
Descriptors: Chemistry, College Science, Electricity, Higher Education
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Gilbert, George L., Ed. – Journal of Chemical Education, 1986
Describes two demonstrations designed to help chemistry students visualize certain chemical properties. One experiment uses balloons to illustrate the behavior of gases under varying temperatures and pressures. The other uses a makeshift pea shooter and a commercial model to demonstrate atomic structure and the behavior of high-speed particles.…
Descriptors: Atomic Structure, Chemistry, College Science, Demonstrations (Educational)
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