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Nieh, Hwa-Ming; Chen, Huai-Yi – Physics Teacher, 2023
The Arduino microcontroller is currently one of the favorite tools of makers, and many teachers have used it in teaching or experiments. In addition, light-emitting diode (LED) smart lighting is the worldwide trend in lighting. There are many teaching demonstrations or applications of color addition using LEDs. Furthermore, the Internet of Things…
Descriptors: Science Experiments, Light, Color, Heat
Hull, Michael M.; Nakayama, Shizuka; Tosa, Sachiko – Physics Teacher, 2023
Newton's laws are a ubiquitous topic in introductory physics instruction. One common problem involves asking what will happen if you stick your finger into a cup of water sitting on a scale. A way to solve the problem would be to first recognize that the water exerts a buoyant force upward on the finger, which students can recognize as being the…
Descriptors: Science Instruction, Physics, Scientific Principles, Concept Formation
Bussani, Andrea; Comici, Cinzia – Physics Teacher, 2023
Data analysis and interpretation has always played a fundamental role in the scientific curricula of high school students. The spread of digitalization has further increased the number of learning environments whereby this topic can be effectively taught: as a matter of fact, the ever-growing diffusion of data science across diverse sectors of…
Descriptors: Learning Analytics, High Schools, Data Interpretation, Data Science
Quang, Ngo Khoa – Physics Teacher, 2022
This article describes a simple way to introduce nanomaterials using the presence of carbon nanodots (CNDs) in widely available food. Budweiser® beer and Coca-Cola®, commercial foods that are commonly accessible, were utilized to demonstrate the optical property of nanoparticles. Specifically, green and violet laser pointers were employed for the…
Descriptors: Science Instruction, Food, Scientific Concepts, Teaching Methods
Pereira, Eliane – Physics Teacher, 2021
In this article, we present a low-cost lab experience, enhanced by new technologies and easy to execute. The objective of the experiment is to explore the moment of inertia of a fidget spinner quantitatively. Our choice was to integrate the teaching of physics with the use of a popular toy, the fidget spinner, very popular among young people and…
Descriptors: Science Instruction, Science Laboratories, Educational Technology, Technology Uses in Education
Pfister, Hans – Physics Teacher, 2021
The Ball Bearing High Voltage generator is a fairly simple and transparent apparatus that can serve as a tool to motivate conceptual descriptions and calculations in electrostatics that are normally presented to our students in a rather dry and matter-of-fact fashion. For example, instead of posing a problem in the typical textbook form of…
Descriptors: Demonstrations (Educational), Electronics, Science Equipment, Scientific Concepts
Campolo, Steve – Physics Teacher, 2020
In high school and elementary college physics labs the measurement of vertical distance is often required. Measuring the distance an object falls or the vertical displacement of springs in a Hooke's law experiment are commonplace. Determining these distances to perhaps a millimeter or two of precision is difficult without an expensive height gauge…
Descriptors: Science Instruction, Physics, Measurement Equipment, Secondary School Science
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
Martínez, Alexuan; Nieves, Christian; Rúa, Armando – Physics Teacher, 2021
Many physics projects recently designed for high school teachers use Arduino as the main tool for managing sensors and data acquisition. This is a low-cost integrated development environment programmed with a simplified version of the C++ language. In comparison, the Raspberry Pi 3 platform, which also allows for the design of physics projects,…
Descriptors: Science Instruction, Science Laboratories, Physics, Secondary School Science
Nelson, Jane Bray; Nelson, Jim – Physics Teacher, 2020
This article describes an activity appropriate for middle or high school physics or physical science students. Rather than giving the answer to the question "How does a milliliter compare to a cubic centimeter?" the students develop a procedure for measuring volume by calculation and by displacement of water. Students share the data and…
Descriptors: Middle Schools, High Schools, Secondary School Science, Science Instruction
Apple, Lillian; Baunach, John; Connelly, Glenda; Gahlhoff, Sonia; Romanowicz, Colleen Megowan; Vieyra, Rebecca Elizabeth; Walker, Lucas – Physics Teacher, 2021
Multiple initiatives contend that all students should master computational thinking, including the "Next Generation Science Standards, the K-12 Framework for Computational Thinking," and Code.org. In turn, many physics teachers have begun to explore a variety of approaches to integrating computational modeling through programming. These…
Descriptors: Science Instruction, High Schools, Secondary School Science, Physics
Berggren, Calvin; Gandhi, Punit; Livezey, Jesse A.; Olf, Ryan – Physics Teacher, 2018
We describe a set of conceptual and hands-on activities based around understanding the dynamics of a Slinky that is hung vertically and released from rest. This Slinky drop experiment typically lasts a fraction of a second, but when observed in slow motion, one sees the Slinky compress from the top down while the bottom portion remains at…
Descriptors: Science Instruction, Hands on Science, Science Activities, Scientific Concepts
Redish, Edward F. – Physics Teacher, 2021
Learning to create, use, and evaluate models is a central element of becoming a scientist. In physics, we often begin an analysis of a complicated system with highly simplified or toy models. In introductory physics classes, we tend to use them without comment or motivation. Some students infer that physics is irrelevant to their understanding of…
Descriptors: Physics, Science Instruction, Interdisciplinary Approach, Mathematics
Oliver, Douglas L. – Physics Teacher, 2018
The study of vibration in uniform beams provides physics teachers with a platform by which a broad range of physics vibration-related topics can be explored without expensive and specialized equipment. This paper presents two laboratory exercises related to lateral beam vibrations. These exercises use beam theory coupled with free sound-analysis…
Descriptors: Science Instruction, Physics, Science Laboratories, Science Activities
Flannery, William – Physics Teacher, 2019
This paper describes a high school or introductory university course in scientific programming that introduces the computer revolution into the physics curriculum at the beginning. In the first one-hour lecture, Euler's method is presented and used to compute a solution to the analytically unsolvable two-body problem. In the remainder of the…
Descriptors: Science Instruction, Physics, Secondary School Science, High Schools