College physics, an active learning guide

Ever so often I manage to get hold of a book that makes me think more deeply about how I teach. This week, this book was delivered and I wish I had found it years ago. It is designed for American college students and is full of short exercises that are suitable for A level,Continue reading “College physics, an active learning guide”

Mix and match electricity questions

Life is currently crazy busy. I am marking and grading A levels and GCSE and have L6 and Yr 10 exams coming in. And I need to find a new place to live. Although I have no lessons currently, there is no time for reflection. However, before half term I was teaching about electricity andContinue reading “Mix and match electricity questions”

Ranking problems: assessment for learning

I read ‘The Physics Suite’ a few years ago, loved it and then failed to do anything with it. This year I started to look at ranking problems and have started to write a few of my own. (I also got hold of O’Kuma, Maloney and Hieggelke, 1999, Ranking task exercises in physics. And IContinue reading “Ranking problems: assessment for learning”

Teaching about polarisation

Polarisation is one of my favourite topics in waves, even though it feels a like it is tagged on to the specification, and is frequently reduced to a multiple choice question about which types of waves can be polarised. However the demonstrations always impress students and there is so much to explain and think about.Continue reading “Teaching about polarisation”

A magnetic demonstration

Sometime a demonstration can show something quickly and easily, be tiny and simple, and yet still take the students by surprise. I steal my demonstrations from other teachers, websites, blogs, the IoP and very occasionally, I do something new in a lesson and find myself doing it forever. I have to admit, I am notContinue reading “A magnetic demonstration”

Deliberate practice and trying something new

I have just started teaching about uniform electric fields and somehow this time it went wrong. I blame teaching online, because firstly, I don’t get the same level of feedback, and secondly, somehow learning online does not make the concepts ‘real’ to the student. There is something that happens when learning physics, where students areContinue reading “Deliberate practice and trying something new”

Teaching about electric fields

I find teaching fields hard. It is by far the most abstract part of the A level course, and if I am not careful it can degenerate into ‘here are the definitions and this is how you apply the equations’. This is especially true with online learning, where discussion is more difficult and it isContinue reading “Teaching about electric fields”

The reflective physics teacher

Reflections on teaching in the physics classroom (especially during lockdown)

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