A short word for acceleration (pedagogy)

In summary: A mole is a number, not a mass, not a molecule, not any item with units. It's a very helpful analogy to help students understand. However, I think you should stick to the standard term, acceleration, and not try to come up with a new word.
  • #1
Cruikshank
82
4
A short word for "acceleration" (pedagogy)

I tutor physics, and I am good at explaining to students what acceleration is. I teach them to
disambiguate kinds of motion--because before studying physics, most people get by without
separating velocity and acceleration as concepts. I know how to teach it. However, I think it is
a lot harder than it needs to be. I am being hampered by language.

Just to repeat: I am not asking how to teach the concept of acceleration. I'm on it.

Acceleration is hard to talk about because we lack short words for it. "Acceleration" is five
syllables, and most of the alternatives are several words long. "going faster and faster" is seven
syllables. "Picking up speed" is better, but then you have to worry about signs while constructing
your sentence, "speeding up" and "slowing down" and "turning" of course.

I often tell students that acceleration is when you "speed up, slow down, or turn." That is six
syllables, barely longer than "acceleration" itself, but it is also six *words.* I'd rather not fill up
my students' "7 plus or minus 2" buffer with a single concept.

Discussion is convoluted. Very often, students will use common words that refer to velocity, in
trying to talk about acceleration. They talk about how "fast" it is accelerating, for example, and
confuse that with how fast it is going--which really could mean a number of things. See the
problem?

I've been trying to brainstorm new words for acceleration. We need noun, verb, and adverb
forms at least. They should be short, preferably one or two syllables. I am not averse to making
up a new word, but I'd rather not be the only one in the world using it and end up confusing my
students.

So I ask: has this been discussed before? Are there better terms out there already, struggling
for recognition? If not, does anyone have suggestions?

Here's one of my attempts, just to clarify what I mean: Zoom.
"The rock is not just falling, it's zooming." "F is proportional to the zoom, not the speed."
High zoom, low zoom, small zoom, negative zoom.
"How high is it? Okay, how fast is it going? Okay, how fast is it zooming?" (You see the
temptation to use "fast" for it?) "How high is the zoom? How big is the zoom? How much is
the zoom?"
"If it isn't zooming, it's in equilibrium. If it isn't moving, it's in static equilibrium. If it's moving
but not zooming, it's in dynamic equilibrium."

I've tried to come up with others but so far that's in the lead. Is there are good short word for
acceleration in some other language, not too hard to pronounce, that English could steal? I
suspect the problem is universal as languages are older than physics, but it would be nice to be
wrong, and there would be automatic acceptance of the new term by some.

Ideas?
 
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  • #2
Acceleration is already a winner.

I would never bother with a new term for it. I just don't see the issue.
 
  • #3
Leave it alone. The term acceleration is used in physics, as you know, mechanics, cars, and other stuff. Just keep hammering on the kids to use the proper word for the activity. Say, "just memorize it and shut up" :-)
 
  • #4
"Surge" or "jerk", the rate of change of acceleration, is only one syllable. Do you think this (the syllable count) will help in explaining that concept?
 
  • #5
I think that you should change both velocity and acceleration. Both terms are far too complicated.
I think you should change velocity to "rock" and acceleration to "roll".
For example, "the car is rocking and rolling". I think this would make physics a lot more fun.
 
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Likes SmokeyMTNJim
  • #6
In all honesty, you should just teach them the standard term acceleration so they don't get confused later on in their education because acceleration is an extremely standard term in physics texts. There are physical terms out there that are longer and harder to pronounce, we can't change them all ;)
 
  • #7
WannabeNewton said:
##\ddot{x}##

##\nabla\nabla x##
 
  • #9
Okay, apparently I wasn't very clear. I apologize. Let's try this again, with an example.

When studying chemistry, a lot of students have trouble with the idea of a mole. My solution is to say that, "a
mole is a zillion." I then explain that a "zillion" is about 0.6 trillion trillion. I compare it to dozen and million.
This helps them get the idea that a mole of something is a number, not a mass, not a molecule, not any item
with units. I then keep using both terms, stressing their equality, and then drop "zillion" once it appears that
they have grasped the concept. I am *not* trying to get them to write "zillion" on exams. I am trying to help
them grasp that a mole is a number quantity, that one can have a mole of electrons or photons or atoms or
molecules. In my experience, teaching this way *helps* them to get the idea of mole faster and more reliably.
 
  • #10
I am a tutor. I relate the mole to a dozen. They know that a dozen eggs is 12 eggs. A mole of eggs is 6.02E24 eggs. Same concept, just a different number.
 
  • #11
Make sure your students have a proper grasp of speed and velocity first. Next move on to acceleration and define it as a change of velocity:

"An acceleration is a change of velocity. To accelerate an object must change speed or change direction or change both."

Give them non numerical everyday examples of things which are accelerating and then get them to come up with examples of their own. A good example is to ask them to describe their journey to school. Were there times during that journey when they weren't accelerating?

The mathematical treatment can follow.
 
  • #12
Just make sure they understand the relationship between position and velocity involves "change" and then extend that to acceleration. Perhaps "change" is the magic word you are looking for?

Some people initially think it strange that changing direction is also an acceleration but that disappears if they understand that velocity also has a direction component so changing direction is also a change in velocity = acceleration.
 
  • #13
How about "a"? That's as short as you can go!
 
  • #14
Cruikshank said:
When studying chemistry, a lot of students have trouble with the idea of a mole. My solution is to say that, "a mole is a zillion." I then explain that a "zillion" is about 0.6 trillion trillion …

you have to see it from the mole's point of view :smile:
tiny-tim said:
a mole is a number of things, like a dozen​

… to be precise (almost), 6.022142 1023 things :wink:

if you go into the garden and find 602,214,200,000,000,000,000,000 moles, that's a mole of moles! :biggrin:
 
  • #15
Delphi51 said:
How about "a"? That's as short as you can go!

How about "aaahh!" or something to that effect. I hear that word uttered frequently near roller-coasters whenever the riders experience "a".
 
  • #16
Moderator's note: thread moved to "Educators & Teaching"

It's even more cumbersome having to phrase test questions to ask about the magnitude of the acceleration. We have "speed" for magnitude of velocity, it would be nice to have a simple word for "magnitude of the acceleration".

But we don't have a word for that, so we work with what we have.
 

What is the definition of acceleration?

Acceleration is a measure of the rate at which an object's velocity changes over time. It is a vector quantity, meaning it has both magnitude and direction, and is typically measured in meters per second squared (m/s^2).

What is the formula for calculating acceleration?

The formula for acceleration is a = (vf - vi)/t, where a is acceleration, vf is final velocity, vi is initial velocity, and t is time. In other words, acceleration is equal to the change in velocity divided by the change in time.

What is the difference between acceleration and velocity?

Acceleration and velocity are both measures of an object's motion, but they are not the same. Velocity is the rate of change of an object's position over time, while acceleration is the rate of change of an object's velocity over time. Velocity is a vector quantity, while acceleration is a vector quantity.

How is acceleration related to force?

According to Newton's second law of motion, force is directly proportional to acceleration. This means that the greater the force applied to an object, the greater its acceleration will be. In other words, force is what causes acceleration in an object.

What are some examples of acceleration in everyday life?

Some examples of acceleration in everyday life include a car accelerating from a stop, a roller coaster going down a hill, a person jumping off a diving board, and a ball being thrown into the air. Any time an object's velocity changes, there is some amount of acceleration involved.

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