29 February 2024
As of the 2025 AP exam revision, are Physics C mechanics and Physics C E&M two separate year long courses now? (No.)
27 February 2024
Experimental procedures in AP physics, the redesigned free response section, and Wally the Astronaut
Wally the Astronaut, from The Physics Aviary |
22 February 2024
A daily quiz based on 2023 AP Physics 1 question 1 - Did you *understand* how to do the homework problem?
It's getting toward the back half of the school year in AP Physics 1. I've made a first pass at all the major content units; we've done laboratory activities out the wazoo. We're gearing toward one more half-length practice AP exam before spring break, and then a final half-length practice in mid April.
My students need practice doing cumulative, AP-like problems which require synthesis of multiple concepts; or which require students to choose from the entire year's menu of possible approaches. Later on, in April and May, I'll have students do authentic AP free response questions in class practically every day, without a safety net. We're not quite ready to take the safety net away.
No, right now, I'm assigning AP-style free response questions as collaborative out-of-class work. Everyone is encouraged to collaborate, to seek help when they're stuck. As long as they get to the correct answers eventually, I'm happy that they're making progress.
You have questions about this approach. "Even the most honest, diligent students will often just do what their smart friend told them to do, Greg. Getting done with the assignment is more important than getting it done right. Even with the five-foot rule religiously followed, at least some students are parroting, not learning, not progressing."
Unless there's disincentive for pure parroting. And I don't mean grade disincentive.
The approach I use - which is absolutely not the only effective approach! - this time of year is the daily quiz based on the AP-style problem. When students come to class, I collect their assignment. But the first four minutes of class are basic questions about the problem they did for homework. We trade and grade the quiz, then I collect the quiz.
Someone who understood the problem, even if they had to be nudged hard in the right direction, can do the quiz just fine. Someone who truly parroted the smart kid cannot do the quiz.
Yet! Even the student who parroted and then flunked the quiz has made progress! The point of the quiz isn't to play gotcha, it's to review the problem in a context in which the students will listen. If I say "Imma go over last night's homework," no one cares. But if I say, "here's the answer to question 1 on the quiz and how I know, now mark your classmate's paper right or wrong," I get rapt attention.
My class is contract graded, which means there's no shame for poor performance, no cookie for being perfect. What's the incentive, then, to take the assignment and quiz seriously? If someone does particularly poorly on the quiz or problem set, I bring them in for a consultation to redo the quiz. I just had a student in while I was writing this post. It took him a relatively short time to redo the problem perfectly, with clear justifications for each part (including the parts that didn't initially require justification). He didn't get this problem at first, but the combination of attempting it for homework, trying the quiz, and grading someone else's quiz meant that he gained a serious understanding of this problem.