Hlud said:
So, i brought up the topic to my colleagues. One of them responded something on the lines of that teaching energy is important because it makes you a more informed citizen on our own energy issues.
Unless they do something that is not presented in the typical introductory physics text then I would probably disagree with them. At my school we offer a class called 'Energy and the Environment' which is more oriented around energy policy and aims to address the 'informed citizen' idea. I have not taught the course (in the future I hope to co-teach it with the chemistry teacher); in my physics classes we don't delve deeply enough (or into the appropriate topics) to make me think that what I've taught students makes them informed about energy 'issues.' What I used to cover is pretty close to what you'd find in any college level introductory mechanics text with some thermo mixed in.
Hlud said:
I do like the idea of using historical context. Can you please elaborate on this? I give a small historical context when i discuss gravitation, but nothing much.
Last year I started incorporating more history into my introductory physics class (on almost every topic) and I liked how the students responded. This coming year will be a big experiment for me as I've changed the curriculum to actually trace the historical development of physics. So take from this what you will - it isn't tried and true yet.
I'm not sure how much detail you are interested in, but I think I have a somewhat novel approach to a first year physics course. While most courses start with Newton (or, more likely, Galileo), I plan on starting with the Egyptians and Babylonians and ending with Newton. In some ways I feel like I have designed a prequel to an introductory physics course except that the depth on some topics exceeds what is typically taught. Along the way students will read excerpts of relevant (translations of) primary sources including works by Plato, Aristotle, Euclid, Archimedes, Augustine, Buridan, Oresme, Copernicus, Kepler, Galileo, Pascal, Bacon, Descartes, Fermat, Huygens, and Newton.
I've never seen physics done this way. I'm pretty excited about it. I think I'll end up hooking more students interests because they'll get history, math, science, literature, philosophy, and even art all in one class.
If students opt to take a second year we'll essentially be able to pick up where we left off. I'll plan on delving into the development of calculus and the completion of classical mechanics - hopefully even getting into Lagrange's
Analytic Mechanics (so they can really see mechanics as poetry!). I've yet to work out the details of the second year though.
Hlud said:
I feel like we forget the applicative aspects of physics in class. I rarely ask the students to build anything. And when i do, i do not ask them to connect it with the physics they learned in class (something i intend to change this year).
If it helps, these are some things I have done in the past/continue to do as long term projects include
1) Simulation of Global Armed Aggression: As part of the unit on projectiles students build large scale tennis ball launchers from surgical tubing/lumber/pipe which can launch projectiles about 3/4 the length of the soccer field if built well. The simulation involves a rather intricate set up that is meant to model how natural resources, economics, and politics affect global conflict. The connection to physics has more to do with technology - I have allocated resources in various ways throughout the time I have done this project to give certain groups/countries advantages/disadvantages over the others.
2) Hobo Stoves: students design and build stoves from tin cans and measure their energy efficiency. Students then attempt a modification to the stove which they believe will improve the efficiency. This is essentially a calorimetry project but it is really fun.
3) Engineering competitions hosted by local colleges/universities: I have done an assortment. Unfortunately some of them no longer exist due to funding cutbacks.
4) Rockets: usually with my advanced class because there are fewer kids (less $). Plus I teach them how to incorporate air drag into their model. What I need is space for a small wind tunnel to make this project complete.
5) Battle 'RC' cars: I haven't done this for years (It was my mentor's project and I don't have the materials since I changed jobs). Have students modify RC cars so they are hard wired to a control box that they make which gets plugged into a wall outlet. Then they play 'king of the hill' with their cars which can be equipped with weaponry to claim the hill.