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50 Years of ERIC
50 Years of ERIC
The Education Resources Information Center (ERIC) is celebrating its 50th Birthday! First opened on May 15th, 1964 ERIC continues the long tradition of ongoing innovation and enhancement.

Learn more about the history of ERIC here. PDF icon

Showing 1 to 15 of 503 results
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Saviz, Camilla M.; Shakerin, Said – Physics Teacher, 2014
Many students have owned or seen fluids toys in which two immiscible fluids within a closed container can be tilted to generate waves. These types of inexpensive and readily available toys are fun to play with, but they are also useful for provoking student learning about fluid properties or complex fluid behavior, including drop formation and…
Descriptors: Science Instruction, Teaching Methods, Toys, Mechanics (Physics)
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Vogt, Patrik; Kuhn, Jochen – Physics Teacher, 2014
It has been illustrated several times how the built-in acceleration sensors of smartphones can be used gainfully for quantitative experiments in school and university settings (see the overview in Ref. 1 ). The physical issues in that case are manifold and apply, for example, to free fall, radial acceleration, several pendula, or the exploitation…
Descriptors: Handheld Devices, Mechanics (Physics), Motion, Computation
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Valadakis, Andreas – Physics Teacher, 2014
Although we experience motion simply as displacement, we study it through complicated concepts such as acceleration, force, and mass, departing from our everyday experience. But it looks like we can stay attached to our primordial notions of time and length without appealing to any other concepts and still have interesting results.
Descriptors: Mechanics (Physics), Motion, Time, Scientific Concepts
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Kaplan, Harvey; Hirsch, Andrew – Physics Teacher, 2014
Gyroscopes are frequently used in physics lecture demonstrations and in laboratory activities to teach students about rotational dynamics, namely, angular momentum and torque. Use of these powerful concepts makes it difficult for students to fully comprehend the mechanism that keeps the gyroscope from falling under the force of gravity. The…
Descriptors: Physics, Mechanics (Physics), Scientific Concepts, Motion
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Hicks, Ashley; Slaton, William – Physics Teacher, 2014
The flow of fluids through open containers is a topic studied frequently in introductory physics classes. A fluid mechanics class delves deeper into the topic of fluid flow through open containers with holes or barriers. The flow of a fluid jet out of a sharp-edged orifice rarely has the same area as the orifice due to a fluid flow phenomenon…
Descriptors: Physics, Scientific Concepts, Introductory Courses, Mathematical Models
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Kuhn, Jochen; Vogt, Patrik; Müller, Andreas – Physics Teacher, 2014
It has often been reported in this column that smartphones are very suitable tools for exploring the physical properties of everyday phenomena. A very good example of this is an elevator ride. In addition to the acceleration processes, oscillations of the cabin are interesting. The present work responds to the second aspect.
Descriptors: Telecommunications, Handheld Devices, Mechanics (Physics), Physical Mobility
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Humphrey, T. E.; Calisa, Vaishnavi – Physics Teacher, 2014
In 1879, in the midst of the debate between English and continental scientists about the nature of cathode rays, William Crookes conducted an experiment in which a small mill or "paddle wheel" was pushed along tracks inside a cathode ray tube (CRT) (similar to that shown in Fig. 1) when connected to a high-voltage induction coil. Crookes…
Descriptors: Demonstrations (Educational), Motion, Scientific Concepts, Mechanics (Physics)
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Mungan, Carl E. – Physics Teacher, 2014
A Genecon is an inexpensive hand-cranked dc electric generator. You can use it to charge a one-farad supercapacitor. If you stop cranking the handle, the capacitor will discharge, sending a current into the Genecon and thereby causing the handle to start turning as an electric motor. How does the current direction compare before and after you stop…
Descriptors: Demonstrations (Educational), Physics, Motion, Mechanics (Physics)
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Dür, Wolfgang; Heusler, Stefan – Physics Teacher, 2014
Quantum mechanics is one of the pillars of modern physics, however rather difficult to teach at the introductory level due to the conceptual difficulties and the required advanced mathematics. Nevertheless, attempts to identify relevant features of quantum mechanics and to put forward concepts of how to teach it have been proposed. Here we present…
Descriptors: Science Instruction, Quantum Mechanics, Mechanics (Physics), Scientific Concepts
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Mylott, Elliot; Dunlap, Justin; Lampert, Lester; Widenhorn, Ralf – Physics Teacher, 2014
Educators have found that kinesthetic involvement in an experiment or demonstration can engage students in a powerful way. With that as our goal, we developed three activities that allow students to connect with and quantitatively explore key physics principles from mechanics with three fun physical challenges. By presenting these activities as…
Descriptors: Kinesthetic Methods, Teaching Methods, Physics, Class Activities
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Chevrier, Joel; Madani, Laya; Ledenmat, Simon; Bsiesy, Ahmad – Physics Teacher, 2013
A number of articles published in this column have dealt with topics in classical mechanics. This note describes some additional examples employing a smartphone and the new software iMecaProf. Steve Jobs presented the iPhone as "perfect for gaming." Thanks to its microsensors connected in real time to the numerical world, physics…
Descriptors: Mechanics (Physics), Telecommunications, Handheld Devices, Computer Software
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Dib, Claudio – Physics Teacher, 2013
A major consequence of special relativity, expressed in the relation E[subscript 0] = mc[superscript 2], is that the total energy content of an object at rest, including its thermal motion and binding energy among its constituents, is a measure of its inertia, i.e., its mass. This relation was first stated by Einstein. He showed that, in order to…
Descriptors: Science Instruction, Scientific Concepts, Physics, Energy
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Greenslade, Thomas B., Jr. – Physics Teacher, 2013
I have used many ploys to start a course in introductory physics, but one of the more interesting ones was to spend 20 minutes describing some of the curves and shapes that we would encounter in our year together. The students saw parabolas, catenaries, hyperbolas, cycloids, circles, ellipses, and helices, and were shown examples, either live or…
Descriptors: Science Instruction, Physics, Introductory Courses, Scientific Concepts
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Foster, Theodore; van Wyngaarden, Willem; Cary, Arthur; Mottmann, John – Physics Teacher, 2013
We have frequently enhanced our department's laboratory experiment involving standing transverse waves in a taut horizontal cord. In addition to the standard experiment, students in these labs investigate the surprising concept that the acceleration of a pulse in a chain hanging vertically is a constant and is equal to half the acceleration…
Descriptors: Science Instruction, Physics, Science Laboratories, Scientific Concepts
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Greenslade, Thomas B., Jr. – Physics Teacher, 2013
Many years ago I saw a picture of a huge set of wheels that was used to remove tree stumps during the construction of the Erie Canal (1817-1825) and was intrigued by its use of leverage, mechanical advantage, and torque. Figure 1 is a scale model of the device based on my memory of the (lost) picture and published accounts.
Descriptors: Science Instruction, Mechanics (Physics), Equipment, Scientific Principles
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