Physical Sciences K-8: Measurement and the Language of Physics Units
This topic contains a selection of units designed to help you to teach physics. In physics, using precise measurements and standard units is important in comparing physical quantities and understanding basic concepts.
Physics Terminology (1)
Activities:
If you've never visited the award-winning Hyperphysics web site, put it on your list. It is a set of online tutorials that features concept maps laid out in a web-like fashion for easy navigation. This page describes units of measurement, unit conversions, dimensional analysis, and basic mechanical quantities. Some of the maps are "active graphics", which link to capsules of background information. Remarkably easy to use!
Level: Teacher Support
Units of Measure (3)
Activities:
This resource is a digital tool for performing unit conversions with the extra feature of displaying cancellation of terms, helping students to gain a deeper understanding of the mathematical processes involved. Students can convert among 25 physical quantities, including units such as force, temperature, energy, and current.
Level: Grades 6-12
References and Collections:
NIST, the National Institute of Standards and Technology, publishes this set of in-depth reference materials, covering 3 topics: 1) Fundamental physical constants, 2) International System of Units (SI), and 3) Uncertainty in measurement.
Level: Teacher Support
Teachers will find in-depth information on base units, derived units, and relationships among SI units in this free web site developed and maintained by NIST (the National Institute for Science and Technology). Don't miss the link to the "Digital Dutch" unit converter. It is amazingly easy to use.
Level: Teacher Support
Applying Measurement in Physics (8)
Lesson Plans:
This 3-day inquiry-based lesson is a great way for students to discover what "accuracy" and "precision" mean in measurement. Fun hands-on activities include measuring objects using ancient "cubit" units and tossing foam darts to gather data. The lesson concludes as students work cooperatively to explore using significant figures. Includes analysis questions and data tables.
Level: Grades 7-12
Duration: 3 class periods
This fun lesson lets students explore a real-life scenario as they compare volume for a cylinder (round hay bale) and a rectangular prism (box-shaped hay bale). They will use math to decide why one shape of hay bale is preferable economically to the other. But wait.....the round bales don't fit in a barn as well, which could affect the outcome of the problem!
Level: Grades 6-9
Duration: 45 minutes
One of the best lessons we've found to help students get the connection between dimension and volume. They conduct an experiment to create two rectangular prisms and two cylinders, then determine which design holds the most popcorn. They will test ideas, graph outcomes, and present findings. Includes printable worksheets with answer keys.
Level: Grades 6-9
Duration: 2 Class Periods
Activities:
This free digital grapher is especially user-friendly for beginning learners. Students can choose from five graph types: bar, line, area, pie, and X/Y. Various patterns, colors, grids, and label choices are available to allow customization. Minimum and maximum values can be set to limit the scale of the graph.
Level: Grades 4-12
This is a really nice interactive simulation to give students virtual practice in using a micrometer, a device for doing ultra-precise measurement down to the level of 1 micrometer. Each time the "reset" button is pressed, a random-size object appears on screen. Students use sliders to move the object into place, perform the measurement, and check the accuracy of their reading.
Level: Grades 7-12
Duration: 30 minutes
This Java-based activity lets students manipulate a 3-D rectangular prism or triangular prism to explore surface area and volume. It's designed to help secondary students visualize the relationship of width, depth, and height in calculating and estimating volume/surface area.
Level: Grades 5-10
Duration: 30 minutes
Content Support For Teachers:
Accurate measurement is important in physical science, but no measurement is absolutely precise. If we assign any two people to measure the same object, there will always be a slight difference.....even if it's only a fraction of a centimeter. In physical science, this is called "uncertainty". This is a great resource to help teachers and students understand the role of error in measurement and how it can affect the results of an experiment.
Level: Teacher Support
Student Tutorials:
Converting between units doesn't have to be frustrating to your students. This tutorial, part of an award-winning collection, is the best we found for demonstrating how to use unit cancellation to solve problems involving unit conversions.
Level: Grades 8-12
For the New Teacher (3)
Activities:
This digital unit converter offers students more than the typical online conversion resource. It allows conversion among 25 physical quantities, from more common applications (force, energy, current, voltage) to lesser-used conversions such as illuminance and magnetic flux. It provides the additional feature of displaying cancellation of terms, helping beginners to gain a deeper understanding of the mathematical processes involved.
Level: Grades 6-12
References and Collections:
This site is designed to be a resource for learning introductory level, algebra based, physics. Lessons and review are organized by topic. The collection features an especially robust section on Units, Measurement, Significant Figures, and use of measurement tools. A $5.00 annual fee gives teachers access to additional simulations, many of which have been rewritten to HTML5.
Level: High School Physics
This resource is a comprehensive guide on SI for teachers and students. It contains tables, charts, and text explanations of base units, derived units, equivalencies, common quantities, and prefixes. To aid the learner in visualizing quantities, drawings of common multiples are provided for each of the base units. The materials are written so that a user with no prior experience with metrics can comprehend the measurements and how they are applied mathematically.
Level: Teacher Support
Teaching Tools (3)
Activities:
This is a very easy to use digital tool for performing unit conversions with the extra feature of displaying cancellation of terms, helping students to gain a deeper understanding of the mathematical processes involved. Students can convert among 25 physical quantities, including units such as force, temperature, energy, and current.
Level: Grades 6-12
This free digital grapher is especially user-friendly for beginning learners. Students can choose from five graph types: bar, line, area, pie, and X/Y. Various patterns, colors, grids, and label choices are available to allow customization. Minimum and maximum values can be set to limit the scale of the graph.
Level: Grades 4-12
Assessment:
Here is a set of free assessment tools for grades 6-12 on topics that cover force and motion, waves, properties of matter, and chemistry. Diagnoser assessments are aligned with the NGSS, and include elicitation (warm-ups) and developmental lessons. After completing the lesson, Diagnoser students answer digital question sets on specific topics, with immediate feedback provided to both teachers and learners. The final step in the process is "Prescriptive Activities", designed to target specific problematic areas located by Diagnoser.
Level: Grades 6-12
Dimensional Analysis (1)
Student Tutorials:
Your students will need to understand how to cancel units before they can solve problems using dimensional analysis. Beginning with simple one-step conversions, it progresses to problems requiring multiple conversions. Students will like the informal writing style by the author, whose motto is "If I can do this stuff, then so can you!"
Level: Grades 8-12
Scale, Order of Magnitude, and Estimation (3)
Activities:
Students explore size estimation in 1, 2, and 3 dimensions. Multiple levels of difficulty allow for progressive skill improvement. Activity is great fun; expect students to be very engaged!
Level: Grades 6-12
Duration: One class period
An updated version of "Powers of 10". View the Milky Way at 10 million light years from Earth, then move through space at successive orders of magnitude until you reach an oak tree in Florida. After than, move from a single leaf to the cell nucleus, chromatin, DNA, and subatomic particles.
Level: Grades 4-12
Duration: 15 minutes
Interactively explore various specimens as they appear under a scanning electron microscope (SEM). SEM can produce very high-resolution photos of details as small as 1-5 nanometers. Students can adjust the focus, brightness, and contrast, and choose from a cockroach, pollen grain, diatom, a gecko foot, a jellyfish, and more. Each successive image doubles the magnitude of the magnification.
Level: Grades 5-12
Duration: 30 minutes
Assessments (2)
References and Collections:
The National Assessment of Educational Progress (NAEP) is the only nationally administered, continuing assessment of what America's students know and can do in various subject areas. This website provides free access to the most recent assessment questions, organized by topic and level. Teachers can view an analysis of the results to see short-term and long-term trends in samples of students at ages 9, 13, or 17 years.
Level: Grades K-12
Assessment:
Here is a set of free assessment tools for grades 6-12 on topics that cover force and motion, waves, properties of matter, and chemistry. Diagnoser assessments are aligned with the NGSS, and include elicitation (warm-ups) and developmental lessons. After completing the lesson, Diagnoser students answer digital question sets on specific topics, with immediate feedback provided to both teachers and learners. The final step in the process is "Prescriptive Activities", designed to target specific problematic areas located by Diagnoser.
Level: Grades 6-12