MarcoAurelio said:
Ah, so when the object goes down it's velocity is increasing negatively and therefore acceleration is negative?
And when the object is thrown upwards the positive velocity is decreasing and therefore acceleration is still negative?
1. Position, velocity and acceleration has two properties: magnitude and direction.
2. The above three quantities manifests their direction with positive or negative sign.
3. The sign of acceleration can be shown by its definition, the time rate of change of instantaneous velocity. Just like what I did.
4.The sign of acceleration can be judged by its direction. You can know its direction without calculating its value by definition because, according to Newton's Second Law, the direction of acceleration and net force are same. As long as you know (intuitively) the direction of net force (in your case, only gravity which is downward), you could know the direction of acceleration.
Here is the deduction:
∵F_{net,y}\:=\:ma_{y}
∵Universal\;gravitational\;law
∴the\;gravity\;is\;downward.
Let the positive y-axis direction be upward
∴(-mg)\:=\:ma_{y}
∴-g=a_{y}
In the fifth line, you should not rewrite (-mg) in this different form, m(-g), because the implication of latter is not force.
Anyway, the only way to determine the value of any physics quantity is calculating them by definition or by physics law.