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Baum, Dave – Physics Teacher, 2020
In a recent submission to "The Physics Teacher," we related how trigonometric identities can be used to find the extremes of several functions in order to solve some standard physics problems that would usually be considered to require calculus. In this work, the functions to be examined are polynomials, which suggests the utilization of…
Descriptors: Physics, Problem Solving, Calculus, Trigonometry
Mateas, Victor – Mathematics Teacher: Learning and Teaching PK-12, 2022
This article describes how mathematics may be experienced in widely different ways across mathematics and physics courses and highlights some unexpected constraints in a trigonometry curriculum. The examples and discussion are based on a study (Mateas 2020) that compares how trigonometry is portrayed in representative physics (i.e., "Holt…
Descriptors: Physics, Science Instruction, Mathematics Instruction, Trigonometry
Baum, Dave – Physics Teacher, 2019
College physics textbooks (algebra based) tend to shy away from topics that are usually thought to require calculus. I suspect that most students are just as happy to avoid these topics. Occasionally, I encounter students who are not so easily satisfied, and have found it useful to maintain a storehouse of non-calculus solutions for some common…
Descriptors: Physics, Science Instruction, Calculus, Trigonometry
Bouquet, F.; Bobroff, J.; Kolli, A.; Organtini, G. – Physics Education, 2021
We created an introductory physics activity for undergraduate students, consisting of measuring the same physical quantity by different methods. This allows us to confront students with questions of uncertainty, precision, and model versus theory. The aim was to measure the height of a building using only a smartphone and everyday low-cost…
Descriptors: Physics, College Science, Undergraduate Study, Measurement Techniques
Victor Mateas – ProQuest LLC, 2020
Mathematics courses should prepare students to use mathematics in a range of contexts, including science. However, students often struggle in applying mathematics in physics courses, even when they understand the mathematical content (Rebello et al., 2007). Often the root of this struggle is attributed to the "student" or the…
Descriptors: High Schools, Physics, Textbooks, Textbook Content
Pinochet, Jorge; Van Sint Jan, Michael – Physics Education, 2018
In 1936, Albert Einstein wrote a brief article where he suggested the possibility that a massive object acted as a lens, amplifying the brightness of a star. As time went by, this phenomenon--known as gravitational lensing--has become a powerful research tool in astrophysics. The simplest and symmetrical expression of a gravitational lens is known…
Descriptors: Physics, Science Instruction, Teaching Methods, Algebra
Smith, Emily M.; Zwolak, Justyna P.; Manogue, Corinne A. – Physical Review Physics Education Research, 2019
Mathematical reasoning with algebraic and geometric representations is essential for success in upperdivision and graduate-level physics courses. Complex algebra requires student to fluently move between algebraic and geometric representations. By designing a task for middle-division physics students to translate a geometric representation to…
Descriptors: College Students, Physics, Science Instruction, Algebra
Galle, Gillian; Meredith, Dawn – Physics Teacher, 2014
A few years ago we began to revamp our introductory physics course for life science students. We knew that this cohort would be less prepared and less adventurous mathematically than engineering, physical science, or mathematics majors. Moreover, from our own experience and the mathematics education literature, we knew that trigonometry would be…
Descriptors: Introductory Courses, Physics, Trigonometry, Scientific Concepts
Oostra, Benjamin – Physics Teacher, 2014
I present a novel way to introduce the lunar orbital eccentricity in introductory astronomy courses. The Moon is perhaps the clearest illustration of the general orbital elements such as inclination, ascending node, eccentricity, perigee, and so on. Furthermore, I like the students to discover astronomical phenomena for themselves, by means of a…
Descriptors: Astronomy, Science Instruction, Secondary School Science, High Schools
Theilmann, Florian – Physics Education, 2014
In a typical high school course, the complex physics of collisions is broken up into the dichotomy of perfectly elastic versus completely inelastic collisions. Real-life collisions, however, generally fall between these two extremes. An accurate treatment is still possible, as demonstrated in an investigation of coin collisions. Simple…
Descriptors: Geometry, Physics, Kinetics, High School Students
James, Wendy Michelle – ProQuest LLC, 2013
Science and engineering instructors often observe that students have difficulty using or applying prerequisite mathematics knowledge in their courses. This qualitative project uses a case-study method to investigate the instruction in a trigonometry course and a physics course based on a different methodology and set of assumptions about student…
Descriptors: Case Studies, Trigonometry, Physics, Teaching Methods
Popelka, Susan R. – Mathematics Teacher, 2011
Tiny prisms in reflective road signs and safety vests have interesting geometrical properties that can be discussed at any level of high school mathematics. At the beginning of the school year, the author teaches a unit on these reflective materials in her precalculus class so that students can review and strengthen their geometry and trigonometry…
Descriptors: Safety, Geometry, Calculus, Mathematics Instruction
Chediak, Alex – Physics Teacher, 2010
In a previous issue of "The Physics Teacher", John Hubisz explained how a mathematics background check has been used at three different colleges to determine the appropriate physics sequence for incoming students. Based on their performance, students are placed into either calculus-based physics (CBP), algebra-trig physics (ATP), or a year of…
Descriptors: Nonmajors, Physics, Calculus, Science Instruction
Sokolowski, Andrzej; Rackley, Robin – Australian Senior Mathematics Journal, 2011
In this article, the authors present a lesson whose goal is to utilise a scientific environment to immerse a trigonometry student in the process of mathematical modelling. The scientific environment utilised during this activity is a physics simulation called "Wave on a String" created by the PhET Interactive Simulations Project at…
Descriptors: Mathematics Curriculum, Mathematical Models, Physics, Trigonometry
Zimmerma, Seth – Physics Education, 2009
Two curious thought experiments concerning the speed of light are presented which have been used to provoke the interest of undergraduate physics students. (Contains 2 figures.)
Descriptors: Physics, Science Instruction, Light, Undergraduate Study