Falling Bodies - 1D Notes
Notes:
Teaching Ideas and Suggestions:
The Interactive allows a user to explore a question. Users can quickly navigate between the Parameters input screen, the Data View, and the Graphical View and back by clicking buttons found at the top of the page. The intent of the Interactive was to encourage students and classrooms to develop a testable question and use the program to investigate the question. Towards that end, we have provided and activity sheet that provides some structure for such an investigation without damping the creativity. The activity sheet is available in PDF format with rights to use with your classrooms. We've also provided the source document for the activity (.docx) for download. Teachers are encouraged to modify it for use with their own classes. A rubric is included with the activity to facilitate feedback and grading.
Our calculation engine has a set of constraints associated with it. These are described in detail on our Parameters Page. Some of these constraints are due to how we perform calculations of the output parameters. Others are associated with the assumptions that we have made about air resistance. We have assumed that the force of air resistance is proportional to the square of speed. While this is a commonplace assumption, it is not exactly accurate for all objects - particularly low speed and low mass objects.
The most important input parameter is the time increment (∆time). This is the time interval over which we repeat our caclulations during the fall. We discuss this in detail on our Parameters Page. If you are using this activity with your classroom, emphasize the mportance of a good time increment. If it is too small, the program takes some time to calculate all the date (especially for tall initial heights). And it ∆time is too large, the calculated data lacks accuracy (especially for low initial heights and high initial speeds.
The value of g is a variable in the program. This allows for field trips to the moon and other planets ... without administrative approval. How cool is that! For those students who wish to compare an air resistance scenario to a no-air resistance scenario, the air density can be set to 0 for the purely free-falling situation.
Finally, we did not dress the provided activity up as such, but we believe a true NGSS activity can be made from this Interactive. For those who take the lead in doing so, we would be delighted to view what you have done.
Related Resources
There are numerous resources at The Physics Classroom website that serve as very complementary supports for the Falling Bodies - 1D Interactive. These include:- Reading:
Lesson 3 of the Newton's Laws Chapter of the Tutorial is a perfect accompaniment to this Interactive. The following pages will be particularly useful in the early stages of the learning cycle on Newton's second law:
Newton's Second Law
Finding Acceleration
Finding Individual Forces
Free Fall and Air Resistance
- Minds On Physics Internet Modules:
The Minds On Physics Internet Modules include a collection of interactive questioning modules that help learners assess their understanding of physics concepts and solidify those understandings by answering questions that require higher-order thinking. Missions NL10 and NL11 of the Newton's Laws of Motion module provide great complements to this Interactive. They are best used in the middle to later stages of the learning cycle. Visit the Minds On Physics Internet Modules.
- Curriculum/Practice: Several Concept Development worksheets at the Curriculum Corner will be very useful in assisting students in cultivating their understanding, most notably ...
Air Resistance and Terminal Velocity
The Elephant and the Feather
Skydiving
Visit the Curriculum Corner.
- Labwork:
Simulations should always support (never supplant) hands-on learning. The Laboratory section of The Physics Classroom website includes several hands-on ideas that complement this Interactive. Three notable lab ideas include ...
Coffee Filter Skydiver
From a Feather to an Elephant Lab
Falling Body Spreadsheet Study
Visit The Laboratory.
- Science Reasoning Activities:
Science classrooms should be filled with reasoning activities. There is one two activity in the Newton's Laws section of the Science Reasoning Center that will challenge students to employ close reading, data analysis, and logical reasoning. The activity is named ...
Coffee Filter Physics Lab
Visit the Science Reasoning Center.
Additional resources and ideas for incorporating the Falling Bodies - 1D Interactive into an instructional unit on Newton's Second Law can be found at the Teacher Toolkits section of The Physics Classroom website. Visit Teacher Toolkits.
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