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Greenslade, Thomas B., Jr. – Physics Teacher, 2021
About 30 years ago I taught a series of summer enrichment programs for high school physics teachers, using funding from the Howard Hughes Medical Institutes. I deliberately chose teachers from smaller cities and towns who were unlikely to have contact with other physics teachers. One of my more interesting teachers came from a rural area in a far…
Descriptors: Physics, Science Instruction, Mechanics (Physics), Secondary School Science
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Cross, Rod – Physics Education, 2022
Experimental results are presented concerning the motion of a ball that bounces up an incline a few times then bounces back down again. The number of bounces up the incline is typically small since the speed of the ball in a direction parallel to the incline decreases rapidly, not only during each bounce but also while the ball is in the air. The…
Descriptors: Science Instruction, Physics, Motion, Scientific Concepts
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Johansen, Astrid; Bungum, Berit – LUMAT: International Journal on Math, Science and Technology Education, 2022
Students' challenges in learning mechanics are well documented from test situations, and group discussions are considered a fruitful way to meet these challenges. In this paper, we present a study from an authentic teaching setting where upper secondary students in groups solve the task of calculating the acceleration of an elevator by means of a…
Descriptors: Physics, Secondary School Students, Secondary School Science, Group Activities
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Burkholder, Eric; Salehi, Shima; Sackeyfio, Sarah; Mohamed-Hinds, Nicel; Wieman, Carl – Physical Review Physics Education Research, 2022
Introductory calculus-based mechanics ("Physics 1") is an important gateway course for students desiring to pursue a science, technology, engineering, and mathematics (STEM) career. A major challenge with this course is the large spread in the students' incoming physics preparation. This level of preparation is strongly predictive of a…
Descriptors: Science Instruction, Mechanics (Physics), STEM Education, Calculus
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De Luca, Roberto; Faella, Orazio; Vestuti, Barbara – Physics Education, 2021
The motion of a cylindrically or spherically symmetric body on an accelerated treadmill, inclined of an angle [theta] with respect to the horizontal, is described by means of Newtonian mechanics. By assuming that the conveyor belt has an acceleration "a[subscript O][superscript ']", not necessarily constant, and that the body rolls on…
Descriptors: Motion, Physics, Mechanics (Physics), Scientific Concepts
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Cross, Rod – Physics Education, 2021
Experimental results are presented on the collision of a superball with two different wood blocks. The results are in reasonable agreement with a simple collision model where kinetic energy is conserved, but better agreement is obtained if a small loss of kinetic energy is assumed, as observed. The physics is slightly more complicated than the…
Descriptors: Science Instruction, Physics, Science Experiments, Scientific Concepts
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Cross, Rod – Physics Education, 2021
A simple experiment for students is to measure the coefficient of restitution (COR) for a vertical bounce on a horizontal surface. In this paper, measurements are presented of the COR for a tennis ball bouncing at an oblique angle on a horizontal surface. Changes in the horizontal and rotation speeds were also measured, by filming the bounce with…
Descriptors: Science Experiments, Science Instruction, Physics, Scientific Concepts
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Kontomaris, Stylianos-Vasileios; Malamou, Anna – Physics Education, 2021
A significant goal when teaching at the secondary education level is to present the generality of the procedures that are being used to describe a wide range of different physical phenomena. However, this approach is abandoned by physics instructors in many cases since the general mathematical background needed to present the above generality is…
Descriptors: Science Instruction, Secondary School Science, Physics, Scientific Concepts
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Ramsey, Gordon – Physics Teacher, 2022
Many high schools, two-year colleges, and universities offer a conceptual physics course for non-science students who have to take a basic science course. The students often enter the course unmotivated and may eventually withdraw. So, how do we make the course interesting enough for these students to gain the knowledge we desire and, more…
Descriptors: Science Instruction, Physics, Active Learning, Scientific Concepts
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Heck, André; Uylings, Peter – Physics Education, 2020
The fact that a bungee jumper can reach an acceleration greater than the acceleration of gravity is, also from a physics point of view, intriguing. Taking only gravity into account, it can be explained by applying conservation of energy or by deriving carefully the equation of motion in a Newtonian approach. In this article we show how it can be…
Descriptors: Scientific Concepts, Physics, Motion, Energy
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Tóth, Kristóf; Tél, Tamás – Physics Education, 2023
We present a new secondary school teaching method of quantum uncertainties of two-state systems. Intending to be a material teachable in schools, only two-state systems described by real numbers can be considered. An elementary argumentation based on school statistics leads to the identification of the uncertainty of a physical quantity in such…
Descriptors: Science Instruction, Secondary School Science, Quantum Mechanics, Physics
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Spiecker, Henrike; Bitzenbauer, Philipp – Physics Education, 2022
Why does a raindrop on a window pane show an image of the environment that is turned upside-down? And why does vision go blurry underwater, but is perfectly clear with diving goggles? Our everyday life is rich in optical phenomena. Unfortunately, these phenomena often play a subordinate role in Optics teaching, compared to ray constructions or…
Descriptors: Science Instruction, Physics, Optics, Science Experiments
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Kaps, A.; Stallmach, F. – Physics Teacher, 2022
In physics lessons at secondary school and experimental physics courses at universities, the magnetic field inside a current-carrying solenoid is considered quantitatively. The corresponding equations and theories are supported by measuring the magnetic flux density inside the solenoid with a Hall probe. It has already been shown that smartphones…
Descriptors: Science Instruction, Physics, Secondary School Science, College Science
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Winkler, Eleanor Anne; Graham, Paul; Unterman, Nathan A.; Grey, Benjamin; Miller, Jacob M.; Miller, Max J.; Sears, Allen J.; Bernat, Alex; Frank, Shoshana; Simon, Joshua; Eliaser, Shira K.; Blackmore, Tom; Copeland, Emmanuelle; Senser, Marybeth; Seiden, Henry; Valsamis, Anthony; Adams, Mark – Physics Teacher, 2022
With support from QuarkNet, high school students investigated the effect of overburden on muon flux by collecting data from Fermilab's Main Injector Neutrino Oscillation Search (MINOS) tunnel. Muon flux varied due to a change in overburden created by a 103-meter deep access shaft. A profile of muon flux as a function of distance from the access…
Descriptors: High School Students, Secondary School Science, Physics, Science Activities
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Cramer, Claes – Physics Education, 2022
The principle of relativity is of fundamental importance in practice when we are solving problems in physics since the axiom states that the result of any physical experiment is the same when performed with identical initial conditions relative to any inertial coordinate system. Hence, conceptual knowledge of coordinate systems is central in any…
Descriptors: Physics, Science Instruction, Secondary School Science, Scientific Principles
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