Welcome to AP Physics with Ms. Bjork THE BASICS:  What you need  What will we cover/do?  The test.

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Presentation transcript:

Welcome to AP Physics with Ms. Bjork THE BASICS:  What you need  What will we cover/do?  The test

AP Physics and You 1.Name 2.Grade 3.Why are you taking this class? 4.Current and Last Math course 5.Favorite Subjects 6.Least Favorite Subjects 7.Activities you are involved in 8.Anything you would really like to do / learn about in this class? 9.What do you want to be when you grow up? 10.What did you do this summer? 11.Anything else you want me to know and/or any questions you have

The Textbook Serway: Physics For Scientists and Engineers 5 th, 6 th, or 7 th edition Co authors: Beichner, Jewett

Lab Notebook Composition Notebook with graph paper, not lined paper, inside

TOPICS: Measurement: SI Units, Dimensional Analysis, Error Analysis Kinematics: 1-D Motion, 2-D Motion, Circular Motion Dynamics: Newton’s Laws, Forces (friction, drag) Work, Energy, Power System’s of Particles, Collisions, and Momentum Rotation, Angular Momentum, Torque Gravitation Oscillations, Simple Harmonic Motion (SHM)

The Game Plan Lots of Labs Practice Problems Group Problems The Usual: Homework, quizzes, tests Review for AP Exam

The AP Exam You WILL get a 5 (it’s as easy as riding a bike!)

The AP Exam The AP C Mechanics test is 1 hour 30 minutes long There are 35 Multiple Choice Questions There are (usually) 3 Free Response Questions The time is divided equally for taking these two parts (so you get 45 min. for each part) Many questions will involve topics for more than one category

The AP Exam The questions have an assigned point value, this is not necessarily indicative of the difficulty (more so of the time typically dedicated to the problem) You only get the equation sheets for the Free Response portion of the test You only get a calculator for the Free Response portion of the test Significant Figures: Carry answers out to 3 or 4 sig. fig.’s, unless question is specifically about or mentions significant figures

The AP Exam The MC section emphasizes the breadth of the students’ knowledge and understanding of the basic principles of physics while the FR section emphasizes the application of these principles in greater depth in solving more extended problems. In general, questions may ask students to: determine directions of vectors or paths of particles; draw or interpret diagrams; interpret or express physical relationships in graphical form; account for observed phenomena; interpret experimental data, including their limitations and uncertainties; construct and use conceptual models and explain their limitations; explain steps taken to arrive at a result or to predict future physical behavior; manipulate equations that describe physical relationships; obtain reasonable estimates; or solve problems that require the determination of physical quantities in either numerical or symbolic form and that may require the applica­tion of single or multiple physical concepts.

The AP Exam: Lab Based Questions Laboratory-related questions may ask students to Design Experiments: including identifying equipment needed and describing how it is to be used, drawing diagrams or providing descriptions of experimental setups, or describing procedures to be used, including controls and measurements to be taken Analyze Data: including displaying data in graphical or tabular form, fitting lines and curves to data points in graphs, performing calcula­tions with data, or making extrapolations and interpolations from data; Analyze Errors: including identifying sources of errors and how they propagate, estimating magnitude and direction of errors, determining significant digits, or identifying ways to reduce errors Communicate Results: including drawing inferences and conclusions from experimental data, suggesting ways to improve experiments, or proposing questions for further study.

The Free Response Section The FR section of each exam is printed in a separate booklet in which each part of a question is followed by a blank space for the student’s solution. The same questions without the blank answer spaces are printed on green paper as an insert in the exam booklet. Make sure you show your work in the booklet!!! Students are expected to show their work in the spaces provided for the solution for each part of a free-response question. If you need more space, clearly indicate where the work is continued or you may lose credit for it. If you make a mistake, cross it out or erase it. Crossed-out work and any work shown on the green insert will not be scored, and credit may be lost for incorrect work that is not crossed out.

The Free Response Section Credit for the answers depends on the quality of the solutions and the explanations given Partial solutions may receive partial credit, so students are advised to show all work Correct answers without supporting work may lose credit This is especially true when students are asked specifically to justify their answers, in which case the Exam Readers are looking for some verbal or mathemati­cal analysis that shows how the students arrived at their answers All final numerical answers should include appropriate units.

The Free Response Section On the AP Physics Exams the words “justify,” “explain,” “calculate,” “what is,” “determine,” and “derive” have precise meanings. Students should pay careful attention to these words in order to obtain maximum credit and should avoid including irrelevant or extraneous material in their answers. The words “justify” and “explain” indicate that the student should support the answer with prose, equations, calculations, diagrams, or graphs. The prose or equations may in some cases refer to fundamental ideas or relations in physics, such as Newton’s laws, conservation of energy, Gauss’s law or Bernoulli’s equation. In other cases, the justification or explanation may take the form of analyzing the behavior of an equation for large or small values of a variable in the equation. “Calculate” means that a student is expected to show work leading to a final answer, which may be algebraic but more often is numerical “What is” and “determine” indicate that work need not necessarily be explicitly shown to obtain full credit. Showing work leading to answers is a good idea, as it may earn a student partial credit in the case of an incorrect answer, but this step may be skipped by the confident or harried student. “Derive” is more specific and indicates that the students need to begin their solutions with one or more funda­mental equations, such as those given on the AP Physics Exam equation sheet. The final answer, usually algebraic, is then obtained through the appropriate use of mathematics.

The AP Exam: pointers from a writer and grader Write CLEARLY, they can’t grade what they can’t read Circle your answers If you go in a weird order, use arrows and circle things to show your “path of thinking” so the grader can follow what you did No expected to get it all correct or even answer it all – but always try – you will get points for good thinking Not penalized for carrying out a problem correctly using a previously determined incorrect answer

The AP Exam: Pointers from a writer and grader For questions with a free body diagram (and there are a lot of them) Do NOT draw vectors into their separate components on the Free Body Diagram Redraw the Free Body Diagram and then analyze the different components from this new diagram No Swearing No Threats (to your teacher or the grader) No Bribes

Review Materials We will review in class If you would like to purchase separate review materials: Make sure it is for AP Physics C Watch out: A lot of review materials are craptastic A couple of good review materials: Princeton Review and Mooney