The Gender-Neutral Physics Project: Tennis Ball Artistry
Cornally and I are on the pursuit of turning his physics classroom into a gender-neutral environment.
Our first gender-neutral project design, inspired by a straightforward combination of art and physics, has been completed and executed by the students to a caliber beyond our expectations.
Even more important, both the girls and guys genuinely enjoyed the process of making their sculptures. In other words:
Cornally introduced the project as simply: “Hey! Let’s fill the room with tennis balls. I want you to need a machete to get to your seat.” The students then looked over the Colossal post and there was no stopping them. It’s pretty obvious when you’ve hit a home run: the teacher doesn’t have to teach anymore.
Cornally set out two rules:
- Keep the delta-time constant.
- Don’t be boring.
The students set out to calculate all sorts of things. Would they fix the initial velocity of their sculpture? Would they work backwards knowing where they wanted it to land? What angle? Any angle!? How much energy to lose on a bounce? This was so much richer than we originally imagined.
It finally came out that kinematics is really just parametric equations. The use of Grapher swept through the class like a wildfire, and the students learned a lot about this kind of simulation:
Students generally have a rough go trying to keep track of what a negative initial velocity does when combined with a positive acceleration, or any permutation of the previous statement.
Being able to toy with the equations gave the students a license to explore. What we’ve seen in the days following this activity is a higher intuition for what the variables in the constant-acceleration equation mean:
Results:
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