Andy Resnick said:
I would change some wording, tho- the phrase 'is a net force required to get the book to move from rest to the desired velocity?' draws a connection between force and velocity. Perhaps the phrase ''is a net force required to accelerate the book from rest to the desired velocity?" would be better. Using the word 'move' reinforces a pre-Newtonian viewpoint.
I see your point. I was actually deliberately avoiding the word acceleration, the thought being that they should understand the concept that
changing velocity (represented here by 'from rest to...') is what force is required for. I thought using the word 'acceleration' was too leading. Regardless, this is the part of the question they got correct.
Andy Resnick said:
Similarly, the phrase 'is a net force required to maintain its motion?' seems to connect force and velocity, because it is necessary to apply a force opposing friction in order to maintain constant velocity. Here is a good opportunity to distinguish between 'opposing forces that sum to zero' and 'no force'- you are careful to say *net* force, which is good.
Yes, the connection of force to maintaining motion is deliberate. I spend some time discussing Aristotle's ideas with students. We talk about how his ideas were incorrect and get into some specifics about why as we lead up to Newton. It's interesting that, even when time is spent on the specifics, the students still misunderstand what the first law is really saying. I think the problem is both conceptual and linguistic. Novice students are not used to thinking about
force the way it is defined in classical mechanics. This year I'm actually planning on having students do casual observations of motion in the style of Aristotle and provide arguments that either support or refute his claims. If all goes well the debate will be on them and I will have little input. Only later when we discuss Galileo, Descartes, and Newton will we revisit the idea of force and changing motion - this time armed with the notion that careful measurement is what determines scientific truth, not casual observation.
Andy Resnick said:
How much time do you spend developing the idea of 'net', 'resultant', 'total' force? In my experience, it's easy for students to grasp the idea of 'net velocity', but really hard to grasp the idea of 'net acceleration'... not sure why.
I agree. Acceleration is, in general, hard for students to understand. I have ramped up my conceptual questions in this area in addition to more quantitative concepts like the connection between graphs of position, velocity, and acceleration. I describe scenarios and then ask students to sketch either the position, velocity, or acceleration vs. time graphs for various situations involving uniform acceleration only (and changes between different uniform accelerations). I have noticed an improvement in student understanding of the concepts since I've devoted more time to it in the past year or two.