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Trout, K. P.; Adkins, Mark; Bekker, Jennifer; Harlacher, Alexis; Ramirez, Frandy; Swingler, Andrew; Wagner, Chase – Physics Teacher, 2021
For science students doing traditional laboratory experiments, often it may feel as if the apparatus and experiment have been specifically chosen for good results. They suspect that the science they are learning in the classroom will not match nearly as well in the real world. However, many educators have observed that student motivation and…
Descriptors: Handheld Devices, Video Technology, Physics, Science Instruction
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Staacks, Sebastian; Hütz, Simon; Heinke, Heidrun; Stampfer, Christoph – Physics Teacher, 2019
We propose an easy experiment that allows students to determine the speed of sound through a simple time-of-flight measurement using two smartphones. The concept of using the sensors in mobile phones for physics experiments has become a well-known option for science teachers. Since these devices are readily available to most students and teachers,…
Descriptors: Measurement, Acoustics, Audio Equipment, Telecommunications
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Blais, Brian S. – Physics Teacher, 2011
It is often challenging, especially at the beginning of a course, to find good examples where students can actively explore and grapple with the methods of science. We want them to learn the connection between observation, theory, prediction, evidence, and falsification, but to really accomplish this we need platforms for which the students are…
Descriptors: Science Instruction, Scientific Concepts, Observation, Theories
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Coffey, Tonya – Physics Teacher, 2008
This paper is a brief summary of an "open-ended" physics experiment that gave my students a glimpse of what real physics research is like. They found it to be both fun and challenging. The subject of the experiment is the well-known Diet Coke and Mentos reaction. A more detailed description of the experimental results has been published elsewhere.
Descriptors: Physics, Science Instruction, Science Experiments, Student Motivation
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Colicchia, Giuseppe; Wiesner, Hartmut – Physics Teacher, 2006
One way to motivate students' interest in physics is to teach it in the context of medicine. Optics, for example, can be taught with examples from the eye. For many years simple optics of lenses has been taught using a model of the eye. However, recent advances in using lasers for ophthalmological (ocular) examinations can be used to increase…
Descriptors: Optics, Lasers, Measurement, Physics