The Physics Behind RC Planes
This lesson plan focuses on the following standards :
HS.P3U2.7 Use mathematics and computational thinking to explain how Newton’s laws are used in engineering and technologies to create products to serve human ends. Interactions between any two objects can cause changes in one or both of them. An understanding of the forces between objects is important for describing how their motions change, as well as for predicting stability or instability in systems at any scale.
HS.P3U2.7 Use mathematics and computational thinking to explain how Newton’s laws are used in engineering and technologies to create products to serve human ends.
At the end of this lesson students are expected to:
1. Use mathematics and computational thinking to explain how Newton’s laws are used in engineering and technologies to create products to serve human ends..
2. Describe the Interactions between any two objects that can cause changes in one or both of them. An understanding of the forces between objects is important for describing how their motions change, as well as for predicting stability or instability in systems at any scale.
3. Use various materials to create an RC plane, then redesign the RC plane as needed to demonstrate Newton’s law of motion and Forces acting on an RC plane.
4. Collaborate and communicate effectively with their peers to complete an engineering design challenge.
5. Describe the possible causes of a variety types of successful and unsuccessful RC plane flights( effect) and identify which part of the RC plane system maybe interacting that may lead to an unsuccessful flight and successful flight.
Lesson Plan Link/URL
https://docs.google.com/presentation/d/1tzj48rbuQl5bldJDzZNt3NxiHc5fZ7nMImZWUQV…Subject Area
Science Physical Science P3: Net Force Technology 3. Knowledge Constructor 4. Innovative Designer 5. Computational Thinker Engineering S1: Engineering & Global Society S2: Apply the Engineering Design Process S3: Apply Mathematics to Engineering S4: Apply Science to Engineering Mathematics Measurement and Data (MD) Geometry (G) Expressions and Equations (EE) Algebra (A) Reasoning with Trigonometry (RT) Reasoning with Vectors (RV) English Language Arts (ELA) Reading (Informational Text)Related Content
More VR integration in the classroom, oh my! This is the second lesson of a two-day exploration of chain reactions. On day one, students received a general overview of chain reactions, Rube Goldberg