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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
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Balukovic, Jasmina; Slisko, Josip; Cruz, Adrián Corona – Physics Teacher, 2018
Physics textbook authors commonly introduce the concept of weightlessness (apparent or real) through a "thought experiment" in which a person weighs herself or himself in an elevator. When the elevator falls freely, the spring balance should show zero weight. There is an unresolved controversy about how this "zero reading"…
Descriptors: Physics, Science Instruction, Scientific Concepts, Textbooks
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Smith, Donald A. – Physics Teacher, 2018
Games have often been used in the classroom to teach physics ideas and concepts, but there has been less published on games that can be used to teach scientific thinking. D. Maloney and M. Masters describe an activity in which students attempt to infer rules to a game from a history of moves, but the students do not actually play the game. Giving…
Descriptors: Physics, Science Instruction, Scientific Concepts, Educational Games
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Della-Rose, Devin; Carlson, Randall; de La Harpe, Kimberly; Novotny, Steven; Polsgrove, Daniel – Physics Teacher, 2018
Discovery of planets outside our solar system, known as extra-solar planets or exoplanets for short, has been at the forefront of astronomical research for over 25 years. Reports of new discoveries have almost become routine; however, the excitement surrounding them has not. Amazingly, as groundbreaking as exoplanet science is, the basic physics…
Descriptors: Learning Activities, Introductory Courses, Physics, Astronomy
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Shakur, Asif; Connor, Rainor – Physics Teacher, 2018
With the introduction of the Wireless Smart Cart by PASCO scientific in April 2016, we expect a paradigm shift in undergraduate physics laboratory instruction. We have evaluated the feasibility of using the smart cart by carrying out experiments that are usually performed using traditional PASCO equipment. The simplicity, convenience, and…
Descriptors: Laboratory Equipment, Undergraduate Study, Physics, Science Instruction
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Morgan, David L. – Physics Teacher, 2018
There are many reasons for exposing physics students to primary source material in the sciences. These works can illuminate the history of science and give students a more vivid picture of the development of physics than most textbooks attempt to provide. They can also serve as pedagogical tools for exploring the misconceptions and "wrong…
Descriptors: Science Instruction, Physics, Primary Sources, Teaching Methods
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Carroll, Felix A.; Blauch, David N. – Journal of Chemical Education, 2018
Three-dimensional printing was used to prepare a p-bonding model with embedded magnets. The model enables students to have a kinesthetic experience that simulates the energetics of bonding, antibonding, and nonbonding p-orbital interactions.
Descriptors: Science Instruction, Printing, Models, Magnets
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Organtini, Giovanni – Physics Education, 2018
This paper describes a cost effective and safe device to perform realistic experiments on the physics of radioactivity in classrooms. It can be used to study both a- and ß-radioactivity as well as ?-emitters and shows extremely realistic behaviour. The device, in the form of a Geiger--Müller tube, was tested during a public lecture and it deceived…
Descriptors: Physics, Science Instruction, Teaching Methods, Safety
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Vollmer, Michael; Möllmann, Klaus-Peter – Physics Education, 2018
Recently, infrared cameras have become available as smartphone accessories. Being less expensive than regular infrared cameras they are readily affordable for schools and many teachers may even privately own one due to their potential to visualize all kinds of thermal phenomena in physics teaching. Any science teacher who wants to use such a…
Descriptors: Physics, Teaching Methods, Science Instruction, Telecommunications
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Salinas, Isabel; Giménez, Marcos H.; Monsoriu, Juan A.; Castro-Palacio, Juan C. – Physics Teacher, 2018
The smartphone's ambient light sensor has been used in the literature to study different physical phenomena. For instance, Malus's law, which involves the polarized light, has been verified by using simultaneously the orientation and light sensors of a smartphone. The illuminance of point light sources has been characterized also using the light…
Descriptors: Physics, Handheld Devices, Light, Measurement
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Duffy, Andrew – Physics Teacher, 2018
This paper describes a pictorial approach to Lenz's law that involves following four steps and drawing three pictures to determine the direction of the current induced by a changing magnetic flux. Lenz's law accompanies Faraday's law, stating that, for a closed conducting loop, the induced emf (electromotive force) created by a changing magnetic…
Descriptors: Physics, Scientific Principles, Magnets, Motion
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Lincoln, Don – Physics Teacher, 2018
The saga of the search for the ultimate constituents of matter has long been one of finding a seemingly fundamental structure that, in turn, was found to be made of even smaller building blocks. Matter is made of molecules. Molecules are in turn made of atoms, which are themselves made of electrons and atomic nuclei. The nucleus consists of…
Descriptors: Scientific Concepts, Molecular Structure, Science Instruction, Nuclear Physics
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Olaniyan, Ademola Olatide; Govender, Nadaraj – Journal of Baltic Science Education, 2018
This research reports on the effectiveness of Polya Problem-Solving and Target-Task collaborative learning approaches in electricity amongst high school physics students. It also includes a gender focus. It was an experimental research with a pre-test post-test control group design. The experimental groups were exposed to Polya Problem-Solving…
Descriptors: Instructional Effectiveness, Problem Solving, Cooperative Learning, Energy
Zhou, Zheng – ProQuest LLC, 2018
Scientific disciplines including mathematics, physics, and chemistry tend to adopt online resources, including websites and web applications, to demonstrate physical experiments and simulate scientific phenomena that are hard to observe and investigate in real world. The present study examined the existing collections of the websites and web…
Descriptors: Web Sites, Physics, Demonstrations (Educational), Computer Simulation
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Herppich, Stephanie; Steininger, Tim; Wittwer, Joerg – AERA Online Paper Repository, 2018
Students in one-on-one tutoring learn best when tutors elicit their constructive responses to scaffold them. Tutors' non-eliciting explanations, in contrast, seem to be less beneficial for learning. Usually, tutors use less eliciting strategies than would be optimal. They, however, seem to use more eliciting in procedural domains (e.g.,…
Descriptors: Physics, Science Instruction, Scaffolding (Teaching Technique), Teaching Methods
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