Learning Outcomes for Newton's Laws

 


Lesson Plans || Learning Outcomes and Activities || Teacher Notes || Labs

 

The list below displays sample learning objectives for the unit on Newton's Laws. The various activities from the Lesson Plans have been organized by objective. This format of organizing The Physics Classroom's activities may be more useful to some teachers than the Lesson Plan format. It is worth noting that the activities identified below only include those activities included on the Lesson Plans and in the Pre-Built Task Tracker courses. Additional activities are referenced on the Teacher Notes page.

 

1. Newton's First Law

Make meaning of Newton's first law by relating balanced forces to the two possible motion states (at rest and constant speed) and describe the relationship between mass and inertia.
 

Reading:



Video:

Labs:
Lab 1: Pass the Water

Lab 2: Galileo for a Day


Think Sheets:

Minds On Physics:
Mission NL1 on Inertia and Mass



 

2. Balanced vs. Unbalanced Forces

Relate the motion that occurs (and its representation by words, dot diagrams, or kinematic graphs) to the relative size of the individual forces acting upon an object for both balanced and unbalanced force situations.
 

Reading:



Video:
Think Sheets:

Physics Interactives with Concept Checkers:

Concept Builders:

Minds On Physics:
Mission NL2 on Balanced Forces and the State of Motion

Mission NL3 on Unbalanced Forces and Accelerations
 




 

3. Newton's Second Law

Use Newton's second law to relate the acceleration to the net force and object mass and to predict the effect of varying net force and/or mass upon the acceleration of the object.
 

Reading:



Video:

Labs:
Lab 4: F-m-a 


Think Sheets:

Physics Interactives with Concept Checkers:

Concept Builders:

CalcPad Problem Sets:
Newton's Laws 2 on Equations as a Guide to Thinking


Science Reasoning Activity:



 

4. Mass and Weight

Define mass and weight; describe the difference between them and use an equation to calculate one quantity from the other quantity.
 

Video:



Labs:
Lab 3: Wait. Hmmm. Gee.
 


Think Sheets:

Minds On Physics:
Mission NL6 on Mass vs. Weight


CalcPad Problem Sets:
Newton's Laws 1 on Mass-Weight Calculations

 



5. Identifying Forces and Constructing Free-Body Diagrams

Identify the types of forces acting upon an object and construct a free-body diagram for the object.
 

Reading:



Video:

Think Sheets:

Physics Interactives with Concept Checkers:


Concept Builders:


Minds On Physics:
Mission NL4 on Types of Forces

Mission NL5 on Force Diagrams




 

6. Force Analysis

Use a free-body diagram to analyze the forces acting upon an object so as to determine the mathematical value of the acceleration or of an unknown force.
 

Reading:




Video:

Think Sheets:

CalcPad Problem Sets:
Newton's Laws 3 on Net Force and  Acceleration

Newton's Laws 4 on Fnet = m•a

Newton's Laws 5 on Net Force and Vertical Acceleration

Newton's Laws 6 on Net Force and Horizontal Acceleration

Newton's Laws 8 on Assorted a = Fnet/m Problems




 

7. Skydiving and Terminal Velocity

Describe the factors that affect the amount of air resistance and use such understanding to describe the changes in net force, accceleration, and velocity for a falling skydiver.
 

Reading:




Video:

Labs:
Lab 5 - Coffee Filter Skydiver Lab
 


Think Sheets:

Physics Interactives with Concept Checkers:

CalcPad Problem Sets:
Newton's Laws 5 on Net Force and Vertical Acceleration (some problems are skydiving problems)
 



 

8. Two-Body Problems

Use and individual-body analysis and a system-analysis to analyze a situation involving two inter-connected objects in motion in order to determine their acceleration and the force that acts between the objects.
 

Reading:




Video:

Labs:
Lab 7 - Two-Body Lab
 


Think Sheets:

Physics Interactives with Concept Checkers:

CalcPad Problem Sets:
Newton's Laws 7 on Two-Body Problems

Newton's Laws 8 on Assorted a = Fnet/m Problems



 

9. Newton's Third Law

Understand the nature of a force to be the result of an interaction between two obects, identify the action-reaction force pairs for any given interaction, and compare the relative magnitude and direction of the two forces in the force pair.
 

Reading:



Video:

Think Sheets:


Minds On Physics:



 

Review Activities




 

Also Available ...

Physics teachers may find the following for-sale tools to be useful supplements to our Lesson Plan and Pacing Guide section:

 

  1. Task Tracker Subscription (annual purchase)
    A subscription allows teachers to set up classes, add students, customize online assignments, view student progress/scores, and export student scores. Task Tracker accounts allow your students to begin assignments in class or at school and to finish them at home. View our Seat and Cost Calculator for pricing details.
     
  2. The Solutions Guide
    We publish a free curriculum with >200 ready-to-use Think Sheets for developing physics concepts. The Solutions Guide is a download containing the source documents, PDFs of source documents, and answers/solutions in MS Word and PDF format. An expanded license agreement is included with the purchase. (Cost: $25 download)
     
  3. Teacher Presentation Pack
    This is a large collection of downloadable content packed with nearly 190 Microsoft PowerPoint slide decks, the corresponding Lesson Notes (as PDF and fully-modifiable MS Word format), about 170 animations (in .gif, .png, and .mp4 file formats), a countless number of ready-to-use images (including the original source documents that would allow for easy modification of those images), and a license that allows teachers to modify and use all the content with their classes on password-protected sites (such as course management systems).  (Cost: $40 download)
     
  4. Question Bank
    We distribute a Question Bank that includes more than 9300 questions neatly organized according to topic. The Question Bank is the perfect tool for busy teachers or new teachers. Even if you don't use the website with your classes, the Question Bank will assist you in quickly putting together quizzes, tests and other documents with high-quality questions that target student's conceptions of physics principles. And if you do use The Physics Classroom website, the Question Bank is the perfect complement to the materials found at the website. (Cost: $25 download)