Unit 2 Period 7 Group 6 Wiki
Alex, Taku, Eddy



The purpose of this wiki is to share assignments in Unit 2 with our teacher Mr. Ozeni. In this wiki, there are four labs that we have done in this class. A motion lab, a lab devoted to Distance vs Time graphs, a lab involving the 7 types of forces, and another lab for the forces and calculating net force.
Standards Covered:
- The velocity of an object is the rate of change of its position. As a basis for understanding this concept:
- Students know position is defined in relation to some choice of a standard reference point and a set of reference directions.
- Students know that average speed is the total distance traveled divided by the total time elapsed and that the speed of an object along the path traveled can vary.
- Students know how to solve problems involving distance, time, and average speed.
- Students know the velocity of an object must be described by specifying both the direction and the speed of the object.
- Students know changes in velocity may be due to changes in speed, direction, or both.
- Students know how to interpret graphs of position versus time and graphs of speed versus time for motion in a single direction.
- Unbalanced forces causes change in velocity. As a basis for understanding this concept:
- Students know a force has both direction and magnitude.
- Students know when an object is subject to two or more forces at once, the result is the cumulative effect of all the forces.
- Students know when the forces on an object are balanced, the motion of the object does not change.
- Students know how to identify separately the two or more forces that are acting on a single static object, including gravity, elastic forces due to tension or compression in matter, and friction.
- Students know that when the forces on an object are unbalanced, the object will change its velocity (that is, it will speed up, slow down, or change direction).
- Students know the greater the mass of an object, the more force is needed to achieve the same rate of change in motion.
- Scientific progress is made by asking meaningful questions and conducting careful investigations. As a basis for understanding this concept and addressing the content in the other three strands, students should develop their own questions and perform investigations. Students will:
- Recognize the slope of the linear graph as the constant in the relationship y=kx and apply this principle in interpreting graphs constructed from data.
- Construct appropriate graphs from data and develop quantitative statements about the relationships between variables.
- Apply simple mathematic relationships to determine a missing quantity in a mathematic expression, given the two remaining terms (including speed = distance/time, density = mass/volume, force = pressure × area, volume = area × height).
- Distinguish between linear and nonlinear relationships on a graph of data.
Comments (0)
You don't have permission to comment on this page.