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AP Physics C- Electricity and Magnetism Textbooks and Calculator The primary textbook that will be used is Physics for Scientists and Engineers, Randall D. Knight, copyright 2004 Pearson Education. I will also supplement the curriculum with Physics, Serway and Faughn, copyright 2006, Holt et al. Laboratory Experiments for Advance Placement Chemistry,second edition, Flinn Scientific ©2006, Vanderbrink. Additional recommended text for each student to buy includes, Calculus Success by Learning Express, AP Physics C 2010 by Princeton Review, and Physics for Engineering and Science by Michael Browne. Students will be required to supply their own TI 83, TI-84 or TI-89. Course Objectives and Design My goal is to expand on the topics associated with electricity that my students were introduced to in Accelerated or General Physics. I will also expose the AP students to laws and concepts of magnetism. Topics covered in this class will include electricity, electric fields, forces and laws, circuits, capacitors and capacitance, comparison of electric force to gravitational forces, magnets and magnetic fields. This course will be calculus based. Students will be exposed to problem solving skills, formula interpretation, extended out of class projects and laboratory experiments. Hands on activities and demonstrations involving students will be used to introduce new topics and/or close chapters by checking for student understanding by using guided inquiry techniques such as paired discussion and AP review. This course will include homework, hands on activities, extended projects, field trips, formal laboratory experiments, quizzes and tests. All students will be encouraged to take the AP Physics C: Electricity and Magnetism Exam at the end of this course. Homework Homework will be assigned on a daily basis. Problems will be used to enforce concepts covered in “lecture.” I will use lecture to introduce topics. My teaching style uses lecture about 15 percent of the time. Due to this class being a sequel (every student will have already completed general or accelerated physics) I will spend most of our time moving away from conceptual physics and towards applied physics. Assignments will include qualitative, quantitative and inquiry type questions. Students will complete problems from both the end of the chapter problem set as well as the student workbook nightly per the quarterly list of assignments available on the schools curriculum drive and/or student flash drive file. Problems will be discussed the following day using peer instruction and demonstrations when appropriate. Use of Laboratory Experiments, Extended Projects and Field Trips My students will complete 9 formal experiments, 1 lab practical test and be required to maintain a formal laboratory notebook. Laboratory experiments and demonstrations will be used to support topics covered throughout the semester. Several experiments incorporate more than one topic and will be used at appropriate times. Experiments will be a mix of low tech and high tech. Although we have PBL equipment, not all of our experiments will incorporate computer analysis of data. I feel that student should be able to collect and organize data, create proper graphs and do mathematical calculations as needed. Because I want to see my students apply their knowledge to laboratory experiments, several experiments will be open ended or inquiry based. I will achieve this by supplying them with a spring board question and require them to come up with appropriate objectives, procedures, data sets, error analysis and conclusions through their own inquiry. Within the error analysis, I will be checking for percent error of quantitative data and also for reflection on skills and techniques. Students should be able to identify variables in their own techniques that skewed results and outcomes. An extended project will be assigned. Students will be responsible for meeting outside of class in small groups, ideally six to eight hours, to design a web-quest on a chosen topic. These assignments will then be used throughout the semester to supplement class activities. Students will be responsible for keeping a journal of time and topic, problems encountered and solutions reached, and a final design. During the month of March (?), student s will receive weekly internet assignments. These assignments will require students to visit physics based websites and participate in interactive opportunities or evaluate current physics issues. Examples of these websites include but are not limited to http://www.edinformatics.com/il/il_physics.htm, http://jersey.uoregon.edu/voltage/index.html, and http://www.frontiernet.net/~jlkeefer/phys_labs.html. One field trip will be conducted to reinforce the importance of physics in everyday experiences. The field trip used will be one of the following: “Eiger Lab” or “Rock Valley College Physics Lab.” These field trips are still pending approval from the sites mentioned. Tests and Quizzes Test will be given following the schedule below. My test will be constructed in a style similar to the AP style. Each test will include multiple choice questions, short essay style questions, applied mathematics and graphing. The graphing section of the test will mirror the laboratory experiments completed in class. Quizzes will be given weekly to check for understanding of topics covered in class and assigned readings. The length of quizzes will vary but will focus on Calculus based questions and/or schematic drawings. Grading The students’ grade will be calculated according to the following break down: Test 50% Labs 25% Homework 15% Quizzes 10% Topic Electric Charges and Forces -Review concepts of charge (mini-diagrams of atoms, surface charge distribution) insulators and conductors (microscopic view of the charge carriers in each) - Introduction to dipoles through induction (“pill shape model” and effect on near test particles) Lab: Insulators and Conductors. Goal is for students to observe electrostatic phenomena using everyday objects. Students will follow simple introductory directions to make observations/hypothesis and then be required to design and implement tests to check hypothesis. -Coulomb’s Law -Point charges in electric fields using field models to calculate the Σ of the forces on particles in fields (through student drawn diagrams and virtual applets) -comparison of electric fields strength to gravitational field strengths Lab: Coulomb’s Law. Goal is for students to design a lab (given a list of materials) and calculate the charge on each pith ball using data collected and Coulomb’s Law. Students will be graded on both quantitative and qualitative data.(Lab from http://www.frontiernet.net/~jlkeefer/q_charge.htm Test Chapters 26 Electrostatic Fields and Gauss’s Law -electric fields of a dipole (continuous review) and multiple point charges and the principle of superposition - Charge density -Uniform electric fields on rods, rings, disks, planes and spheres (through diagrams and quantitative problems) -Motions if charges particles in capacitors (students will complete a short research project with leader questions, such as “What is a capacitor? Who invented the capacitor? What are common uses of capacitors? etc.” ) (acceleration and non-deflection of particles through capacitor will be taught through diagrams, qualitative and quantitative problem) -Introduction to electric flux and symmetry (through qualitative diagrams) -Using Gauss’s Law to calculate fields on different Chapter 26 27 28.1-28.3 shaped objects in a constant electric field (evaluate and calculate surface intragrals) Using Gauss’s Law to calculate the charge distribution on conductors Lab: Electrostatics. Goal is for students to design a set of mini experiments to test the use of electroscopes. Students will map and calculate the amount and type of charged particles present. Students will also predict and draw conclusions about the type of material best suited for a capacitor.(model of lab found in Holt pg 588-591) Test Chapters 27-28 Electric Potential 29-30 -Potential energy (of point charges, in an electric field, connection between mechanics and charge) - Conservation of electrical energy inside of a capacitor (use conservation of energy formulas as applied to point charges inside of a uniform electric field, escape velocities) -Calculate potential difference in capacitors - Establish a clear understanding between “electric potential” and “potential difference” -Interpreting graphical representations of potential capacitors (use V vs. distance graphs and contour line diagrams to reinforce the concept of electric potential inside a capacitor) (students will draw, interpret and analysis graphics, they will use calculus integrals for finding area under curves) Ohm’s Law and Direct Current -Electron current and creating current -Ideal batteries and EMF - Capacitors with dielectrics (students will calculate capacitance with and without dielectrics in capacitors and look make connections between voltage, charge, electric field and capacitance) -Kirchhoff’s Loop Law (students will show understanding of loss of electric potential as the charge moves through simple DC circuits through diagrams and quantitative calculations) - Kirchhoff’s Junction Law (students will show understanding of conservation of current through qualitative and simple quantitative problems) Lab: Students will draw a card of accepted everyday appliances and be required to draw a proper schematic (includes direction of current, identifies loads and areas of voltage drops, etc.) and build a representative circuit for the appliance from the given materials table. Students will then present their completed product to the class for peer evaluation. -Ohms Law , Resistance and Conductivity -Sketching and analyzing RC circuits (include a review of resistors and capacitors in series and parallel) Lab: RC Circuits. Goal is for students to construct circuits and use Ohms Law to support voltage, resistance and capacity. (Holt pg 634-635) Lab: Electric Fields. Goal is for students to use an electric field apparatus (made or bought) to understand to significance of dielectrics and insulators. Students will test several different shaped electrodes as well as several different insulting materials. Instruction will be a variation of the lab found at http://www.practicalphysics.org/go/Experiment_302. html Test Chapter 30-32 32 Magnetic Forces and Fields 33 -Effects of current on compasses -Magnetic field of a current (students will learn to use the right hand rule in order to support their math calculations) - Ampere’s Law -Magnetic force on a moving charge Electromagnetic Induction 34 - Faraday’s Law 9after completing lab from Holt page 746-747, students will present their interpretation of Faraday’s Law as seen in lab. (students understanding of terms such as induction, flux, current, field will be check via a rubric of oral presentation, Q and A will be included) Lab: Electromagnetic Induction: Goal is for students to test the strength of an electromagnetic using a galvanometer, primary coil and secondary coil set, iron core. (Holt 746-747) Field trip to near by Junior College to participate in a lab experiment. ALTERNATIVE: Mapping Magnetic Field Lines. Students will use bar magnets and horseshoe magnets to establish and understanding of magnetic B lines around magnets. Students will use qualitative sketches to show understanding and mapping skills OR “Electro Chemical Cells” lab from Laboratory Experiments for AP Chemistry page 305-312. - motion emf - Lenz’s Law -LC circuits (through reading and applets, student will learn the connection between LC circuits and potential energy) Lab: Electromagnet. Goal is for students to construct their own electromagnetic in order to discover the relationship between strength and the number of turns in the copper wire. Students will research topic and find on the internet a procedure to follow in order to reach this goal. Test Chapters 33-34 Lab Practical Test: Electrolysis. Goal is for students to show their understanding of electricity and its real world application through this practical. Students will be given a set of pre-test questions, two days to complete the assigned lab in a small group setting, and overnight for data analysis and conclusions. ( Lab from Laboratory Experiments for AP Chemistry, page 321-327)