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What Is Newton's First Law?
Content Provider | TeachEngineering: STEM curriculum for K-12 |
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Author | Anthony, Elizabeth Strobel, Scott Teter, Jacob |
Copyright Year | 2014 |
Description | Students are introduced to the concepts of force, inertia and Newton's first law of motion: objects at rest stay at rest and objects in motion stay in motion unless acted upon by an unbalanced force. Students learn the difference between speed, velocity and acceleration, and come to see that the change in motion (or acceleration) of an object is caused by unbalanced forces. Students are introduced to the concepts of force, inertia and Newton's first law of motion: objects at rest stay at rest and objects in motion stay in motion unless acted upon by an unbalanced force. Examples of contact and non-contact types of forces are provided, specifically applied, spring, drag, frictional forces, and magnetic, electric, gravitational forces. Students learn the difference between speed, velocity and acceleration, and come to see that the change in motion (or acceleration) of an object is caused by unbalanced forces. They also learn that engineers consider and take advantage of these forces and laws of motion in their designs. Through a PowerPoint® presentation and some simple teacher demonstrations these fundamental science concepts are explained and illustrated. This lesson is the first in a series of three lessons that are intended to be taught as a unit. |
Language | English |
Access Restriction | Open |
Rights Holder | Regents of The University of Colorado University of California Davis |
Subject Keyword | Physical Science Physics Newton's Third Law Laws of Motion Law of Inertia Newton's First Law Newton's Second Law Velocity Law of Motion Non-contact Acceleration Inertia Contact Force Unbalanced Force |
Content Type | Text |
Time Required | PT1H |
Education Level | Class V Class VI Class VII |
Resource Type | Notes |
Subject | Physics |