dr baby beanie
*is so happeeeeee!!!*
How do you get taught physics at school?
:uhhuh:dr baby beanie said:omgosh Ashton? If so do u miss premium?
Blackboard more like white board now.
Not in every school. Two I taught at this year still had blackboards!dr baby beanie said:omgosh Ashton? If so do u miss premium?
Blackboard more like white board now.
We still have blackboards, mainly use white boards, except with one teacher who's a lefty.alcalder said:Not in every school. Two I taught at this year still had blackboards!
I found that the more I got interested and i did better when i learn it in context..alcalder said:As a teacher of physics and one who has observed many different ways of teaching Physics these are some that come to mind:
- Hand out the syllabus, get the students to research the entire thing and read the notes in class (the way I was taught and it was hard hard work)
- Hand out photocopied sheets from various text books that cover the dot points and read them together in class (observed a teacher who was not primarily a Physics teacher but a Chem teacher - obviously not very comfy with the material)
- Chalk and talk lessons - everything written on the board and students to copy it down, no student interaction
- Specialist notes written by the teacher that cover the dot points exactly giving examples that help with HSC questions (a fellow Physics teacher who liked to have well-prepared students)
My personal style is a mix of all of these BUT I prefer a lot of interaction with students giving input and explaining and working it through in their head. Mixing up the lessons. I would prefer to do practical of some sort in every lesson but the syllabus is chocka-block and sometimes you have to do theory lessons, especially since the syllabus does not allow for prac lessons.
These skills should be, essentially, tested during in-school assessment tasks. The teacher should be setting the practical tasks in order to assess these skills and should also be observing you as you do the practical in order to check certain other skills.dr baby beanie said:Ok, now about practicals: How much focus is given on skills?
Bcoz for phys pracs all we do it get a sheet, read it in 5 mins, do the prac, write the results and answer a couple of questions from the sheet, which is done within a lesson and takes less than two pages, then it gets marked by the teacher.
Whereas notes I got from another school, it seems every time they do a practical they do at least 6 pages on skills relating to the syllabus eg "justifies the appropriateness of a particular investigation plan: predict possible issues that may arise during the course of an investigation and identify strategies to address these issues if necessary" etc. We don't really seem to address the criteria and I suppose these skills are tested within the HSC somehow.
Frankly, I don't see your point of mimicking someone else's postLucid Scintilla said:Jesus, it is imperative that one should acknowledge how Ruse is so good, and others are not.
We don't, too. At best, most of us are learning a new concept (meaning, some of us are too thick to understand and/or others have already learnt it); at worst, the teacher reiterates what he said the lesson before for the Anglos, and, surprisingly (I guess), some Asians, incl. 'Curries'.
We also get a copy of the syllabus, which serves as a "time plan", which we work from (or, in the case of most people, do not work from - lazy - boys - bludge - sport - important - blahhh). Anyhow, the teacher announces that he's going to start on Moving About (Chap 5 & Chap 6) first, and then every lesson this year, he goes up and describes some moving object (rock, car, rabbit, etc), poses a few questions and gets us to do graphs; plus a few experiments.
It'd be okay if he didn't sound so pleasant and !insult (not insult) us.
The course doesn't seem the least bit difficult, though, so I've given up on the teacher, spent lessons doing other stuff, and I'll just skim the textbook/napping.
OH, and doing practice HSC's, too.
Back to the topic.dr baby beanie said:How do you get taught physics at school?
A good teacher operates without a textbook glued to his hand.Teddy Lee said:Our teacher talks about concepts, mostly using the board and we write notes as he speaks but there's heaps of q&a going on so lots of student interaction. sometimes he makes really cool models to help us understand. we don't really use textbooks, he gives us notes from various sources and we fill them in/read them at home. prac lessons are fun and usually take all lesson though he's not very strict with marking the experiments. as for h/w, he gives us exercises when relevant though he doesn't really mark it.
love the way he teaches! unlike my maths teacher, he can operate without a textbook glued to his hand.