I'm in the Charlottesville airport ready for my trip to see the Portland Thorns. At school, physics fight preparation starts Monday.
Friday was my last class with the AP Physics 1 section. They will be mentoring conceptual students in preparation for the physics fight tournament on May 21.
The discussion in Friday's class turned to physics teaching, We talked about meeting their mentees where they are, not where mentors want them to be. We talked about mentoring not being about the glory of the mentor, but about support for the students being mentored.
As a practical example, I gave this algebra-based section a 30-second explanation of free-fall with air resistance, including the differential equation for velocity and how that results in an exponential change from acceleration of g to terminal speed. As their mouths hung open, I asked the class: how would you have felt if I had started with this presentation on the first day of class? It's fully correct, after all... and are you ready to explain free-fall with air resistance? Why not? I've explained it to you...
They got my point in a visceral way. I saw the students nodding, I saw the figurative light bulb go on over their heads. Not that I won't have to help out some mentors who talk at their group at way too high a level! But at least now I'll be able to say "remember what we talked about?"
FUNDAMENTALS CHECK #11
101. Planet A and Planet B orbit one another. Planet A is four times the mass of planet B. What is the ratio of the net force on planet A to the net force on planet B?
102. Under what conditions is the angular momentum of a system conserved?
103. The unbalanced force on an object is in the direction of ________.
104. A 1 kg block falls from a table to the floor 1 m below; air resistance is negligible. Consider the block-earth system. How much work was done by external forces on the block during its fall?
105. A person stands on a scale in an elevator. Give all ways the elevator could be moving if the scale reading is greater than the person's weight.
106. A block slides along the floor to the right, slowing down due to friction. What is the Newton's third law force pair to the force of friction on the block?
107. A block slides along the floor to the right, slowing down due to friction. What is the direction of the block's acceleration?
108. A block attached to a string oscillates as a pendulum in simple harmonic motion. Describe the direction of the unbalanced force on the block throughout its motion.
109. How do you determine speed from a position-time graph?
110. A meterstick of mass m hangs horizontally. How much torque is provided by the earth about the meterstick's center of mass?