Subject/Course:
IGCSE
Physics
Lesson
Title:
Energy
Designer:
Gary
Kearns
Stage
1
Desired
Results
Established
Goals:
IGCSE
Physics
1.
General
Physics
1.7.1
Energy
Identify
changes
in
kinetic,
gravitational
potential,
chemical,
elastic
(strain),
nuclear
and
internal
energy
that
have
occurred
as
a
result
of
an
event
or
process.
Recall
and
use
the
expressions
kinetic
energy
=
mv2
and
change
in
gravitational
potential
energy
=
mgh.
Recognise
that
energy
is
transferred
during
events
and
processes,
including
examples
of
transfer
by
forces
(mechanical
working),
by
electrical
currents
(electrical
working),
by
heating
and
by
waves.
Apply
the
principle
of
conservation
of
energy
to
simple
examples.
Apply
the
principal
of
conservation
of
energy
to
examples
involving
multiples
stages.
Explain
that
in
any
event
or
process
the
energy
tends
to
become
more
spread
out
among
the
objects
and
surroundings
(dissipated).
Understandings:
Essential
Questions:
Energy
can
be
active
or
stored
in
a
variety
of
forms.
How
does
energy
flow
within
a
system?
Energy
can
be
converted
from
one
form
to
another.
How
can
energy
be
dissipated?
Energy
can
be
transferred
into
or
out
of
a
system
by
work
done.
How
does
the
Law
of
Conservation
of
Energy
relate
to
biology,
chemistry,
geology,
and
astronomy?
Energy
in
a
system
is
constant;
it
cannot
be
created
or
destroyed.
What
resources
provide
humanity
with
useful
forms
of
energy?
Kinetic
energy
and
gravitational
potential
energy
can
both
be
calculated
using
formulae.
Students
will
know
Students
will
be
able
to
The
different
forms
of
energy.
The
Law
of
Conservation
of
Energy.
That
gravitational
potential
energy
=
mgh.
That
kinetic
energy
=
mv2.
Trace
the
movement
of
energy
through
an
example
involving
multiples
stages.
Identify
where
and
when
energy
is
dissipated.
Make
calculations
involving
gravitational
potential
energy.
Make
calculations
involving
kinetic
energy.
Stage
2
-
Evidence
Performance
Tasks:
Other
Evidence:
1. Students
will
answer
questions
in
real
time
during
an
energy
conservation
demonstration.
2. Students
will
work
individually,
or
in
groups,
to
develop
energy
charts
based
on
situations
described
with
words
and
images.
The
students
will
use
whiteboards
and
markers
to
organize
their
ideas
and
present
to
the
class.
3. Students
will
apply
knowledge
of
the
conservation
of
energy,
as
well
as
the
formulae
for
gravitational
and
kinetic
energy,
to
real-
life
situations.
(A
pole-vaulter
reaching
a
record-breaking
height
and
a
motorcycle
stuntman
jumping
to
the
top
of
a
96-foot
tall
building).
4. Conservation
of
Energy
Lab
Students
will
apply
knowledge
of
the
conservation
of
energy,
as
well
as
the
formulae
for
gravitational
and
kinetic
energy,
to
determine
the
energy
lost
internally.
1. There
will
be
informal
assessment
happening
continuously
throughout
class.
Lessons
allow
for
lengthy
or
short
review
for
each
topic.
2. Additional
practice
assignments
to
be
given
as
needed.
3. The
students
will
begin
each
class
with
a
Question
of
the
Day,
reviewing
previous
lessons.
4. There
is
a
quiz
at
the
end
of
the
first
lesson.
5. There
will
be
a
unit
examination
three
weeks
after
these
lessons
(including
energy,
work,
power,
and
energy
resources).
Stage
3
Learning
Plan
Learning
Activities:
The
time
allotted
for
these
concepts
was
one
week,
consisting
of
five
45-minute
periods.
Period
1
Forms
of
Energy:
1. IGCSE
Physics
Question
of
the
Day
(Slides
1
&
2)
The
IGCSE
Question
of
the
Day
is
a
short
activity
for
the
beginning
of
class.
I
usually
review
previous
lessons
and
familiarizes
students
with
the
Paper
1
of
the
IGCSE
exam.
2. Energy
Word
Web
(Slide
4)
This
is
a
five-minute
activity
to
organize
prior
learning.
Students
are
put
into
groups
and
given
a
whiteboard
and
marker.
They
should
create
a
word
web
for
everything
that
they
already
know
about
physics.
Afterward,
a
member
from
each
group
can
discuss
the
word
webs.
Optional:
the
teacher,
or
a
student
representative,
can
construct
a
large
word
web
on
the
board,
compiling
all
of
the
groups
thoughts.
3. Forms
of
Energy
Notes
and
Discussion
(slides
5
34)
The
first
slide
introduces
energy
as
the
ability
to
do
work
or
cause
change.
A
further
definition
of
the
ability
to
cause
pain
is
added
for
discussions
in
this
class.
Tell
the
students
that
although
scientists
categorize
energy
into
different
forms,
it
is
important
to
realize
that
many
categories
overlap.
Most
forms
of
energy
will
have
a
short
video
to
prompt
discussion
before
the
teacher
gives
the
name
and
meaning.
Three
forms
of
energy
have
an
additional
demonstration/discussion
to
introduce
the
students
to
the
factors
than
affect
the
quantity
of
each
form
(in
preparation
for
Period
4).
4. Gravitational
Potential
Energy
Demonstration/Discussion
(Slide
8)
Take
out
two
balls
(one
heavier
than
the
other).
Place
the
lighter
one
on
the
floor
in
front
of
a
student.
Ask
if
it
could
hurt
them.
(No.)
Ask
if
it
has
energy.
(No.)
Pick
it
up
and
hold
it
above
their
head.
Ask
if
it
could
hurt
them.
(Yes.)
Ask
if
it
has
energy
now.
(Yes.)
Why
does
it
have
energy
now?
(Did
work
to
the
ball
when
lifted
it.)
Hold
it
higher
above
their
head
and
ask
if
it
would
hurt
more
now?
(Yes.)
Why?
(It
is
higher;
height
affects
gravitational
potential
energy.)
Show
the
student
the
other
ball
and
hold
it
at
the
same
height
of
the
first.
Ask
if
the
heavier
one
would
hurt
more.
(Yes.)
Ask
why.
(It
has
more
mass/weight;
mass/weight
affects
gravitational
potential
energy).
5. Elastic
Energy
Demonstration/Discussion
(Slide
10)
Take
out
two
rubber
bands
(one
thicker
than
the
other)
or
two
springs
(one
with
a
larger
spring
constant).
Place
the
small
one
on
a
desk
in
front
of
a
student.
Ask
if
it
could
hurt
them.
(No.)
Ask
if
it
has
energy.
(No.)
Pick
it
up,
stretch
it,
and
point
it
at
them.
Ask
if
it
could
hurt
them.
(Yes.)
Ask
if
it
has
energy
now.
(Yes.)
Why
does
it
have
energy
now?
(Did
work
to
the
band/string
when
it
was
stretched.)
Stretch
it
more
and
ask
if
it
would
hurt
more
now?
(Yes.)
Why?
(It
is
stretched
more;,
distance
stretched
affects
elastic
energy.)
Show
the
student
the
other
band/spring
and
stretch
it
the
same
length
as
the
first.
Ask
if
the
second
one
would
hurt
more.
(Yes.)
Ask
why.
(It
is
thicker
or
has
a
larger
spring
constant,
spring
constant
affects
elastic
energy).
6. Kinetic
Energy
Demonstration/Discussion
(Slide
18)
Take
out
two
balls
(one
heavier
than
the
other).
Place
the
lighter
one
on
a
desk
in
front
of
a
student.
Ask
if
it
could
hurt
them.
(No.)
Ask
if
it
has
energy.
(No.)
Pick
it
up
and
pretend
to
throw
it
at
them.
Ask
if
the
throw
ball
could
hurt
them.
(Yes.)
Ask
if
it
has
energy
now.
(Yes.)
Why
does
it
have
energy
now?
(Did
work
to
the
ball
when
pushing/throwing
it.)
Pretend
to
throw
it
harder
and
ask
if
it
would
hurt
more
now?
(Yes.)
Why?
(It
is
moving
faster,
speed
affects
kinetic
energy.)
Show
the
student
the
other
ball
and
pretend
to
throw
it
again.
Ask
if
the
heavier
one
would
hurt
more.
(Yes.)
Ask
why.
(It
has
more
mass/weight,
emphasize
that
mass,
not
weight,
affects
kinetic
energy).
7. Forms
of
Energy
Quiz
(Slides
35
41)
This
is
a
quick
review
to
see
if
students
can
identify
various
forms
of
energy.
It
include
four
pictures
and
two
videos.
8. Additional
Practice
(Slide
42)
This
is
the
section
of
the
book
that
relates
to
this
lesson
(pages
80
82
and
questions
6.1
6.7).
Depending
on
the
progress
of
the
class,
this
can
be
assigned
to
all
students,
some
students,
or
given
as
optional
practice.
Period
2
Conservation
of
Energy
Demonstration:
1. IGCSE
Physics
Question
of
the
Day
(Slides
1
&
2)
The
IGCSE
Question
of
the
Day
is
a
short
activity
for
the
beginning
of
class.
I
usually
review
previous
lessons
and
familiarizes
students
with
the
Paper
1
of
the
IGCSE
exam.
2. Law
of
Conservation
of
Energy
Introduced
(Slides
4
6)
The
Law
of
the
Conservation
of
Energy
is
introduced.
Students
discuss
the
energy
conversions
that
take
place
within
a
cell
phone
when
the
battery
is
fully
charged
(chemical
electrical
sound
/
light
/
kinetic
(vibrations)
/
Heat
(hopefully
not
too
much)).
Students
then
discuss
the
energy
conversions
that
happen
when
the
battery
is
dead
(none)
and
identify
that
electrical
energy
needs
to
be
transferred
into
the
phone
to
continue
to
use
it.
3. Conservation
of
Energy
Demonstration
(Slides
7)
This
demonstration
can
be
accomplished
with
a
ball
bearing
hanging
from
some
fishing
line.
However,
it
is
more
exciting
with
a
bowling
ball
hanging
from
the
ceiling
by
a
rope.
The
setup
should
be
thoroughly
checked
before
students
arrive
to
make
sure
that
it
is
safe.
At
the
end
of
the
demonstration
and
questioning,
students
can
try
to
drop
it.
Make
sure
that
their
heads
are
resting
against
an
unchanging
surface
so
that
they
do
not
accidentally
move
their
heads
forward.
(When
the
ball
is
hanging,
before
it
is
dropped.)
What
type
of
energy
does
the
ball
have?
How
do
you
know
that?
(Gravitational,
it
is
above
the
ground.)
If
we
image
that
the
rope
is
unbreakable,
can
the
ball
go
any
lower?
Lets
define
the
bottom
of
the
ball
as
the
bottom
of
the
system,
what
type
of
energy
does
it
have
now?
(No,
none.)
If
I
pick
the
ball
up,
what
is
happening
to
the
energy?
How
can
it
increase
if
energy
is
conserved?
(It
increases;
you
do
work
to
transfer
energy
into
the
system.)
What
type
of
energy
does
it
have
now?
What
percentage
is
gravitational
energy?
(Gravitational,
100%)
Watch
the
very
bottom
point
as
I
release
it.
What
time
of
energy
does
it
have
when
it
reaches
that
point?
(Kinetic,
100%)
What
type
of
energy
does
it
have
on
the
other
side?
(Gravitational)
How
does
that
height
on
the
far
side
compare
to
the
height
on
the
initial
side?
How
does
the
gravitational
potential
energy
at
the
far
side
compare
to
the
initial
side?
(Same,
same)
As
it
is
halfway
down,
what
type
of
energy
does
it
have?
How
much
of
each
type?
(Gravitational
&
kinetic
energy,
about
50%
of
each)
If
it
doesnt
rise
to
the
exact
same
starting
position,
does
that
mean
that
the
Law
of
Conservation
of
Energy
is
false?
Why
not?
(No,
some
energy
to
transferred
to
the
air
due
to
air
resistance.)
If
I
drop
it
from
in
front
of
my
face
and
no
additional
energy
is
added,
what
do
you
expect
will
happen?
(It
shouldnt
rise
up
any
higher
or
hit
you.)
If
I
push
it
initially,
transferring
in
energy
as
work,
what
will
happen?
(It
will
rise
higher
in
the
end
and
hit
you
make
sure
to
move
out
of
the
way.)
4. Conservation
of
Energy
Demonstration
Continued
Discussion
(Slide
8)
This
video
shows
a
similar
demonstration
going
wrong.
Ask
the
students
to
identify
if
the
conservation
of
energy
was
broken.
(It
was
not,
the
woman
in
the
video
leaned
forward).
5. Additional
Practice
(Slide
9)
This
is
the
section
of
the
book
that
relates
to
this
lesson
(pages
83
84
and
question
6.8).
Depending
on
the
progress
of
the
class,
this
can
be
assigned
to
all
students,
some
students,
or
given
as
optional
practice.
Period
3
Conservation
of
Energy
Practice:
1. IGCSE
Physics
Question
of
the
Day
(Slides
1
&
2)
The
IGCSE
Question
of
the
Day
is
a
short
activity
for
the
beginning
of
class.
I
usually
review
previous
lessons
and
familiarizes
students
with
the
Paper
1
of
the
IGCSE
exam.
2. Review
Law
of
Conservation
of
Energy
(Slide
4)
3. Introduce
Energy
Pie
Charts
(Slides
2
11)
These
slides
introduce
Energy
Pie
Charts
which
are
used
to
do
comparative
analysis
of
the
energy
moving
through
a
system.
Slides
5
&
6
being
with
elastic
energy.
Slide
7
&
8
introduce
kinetic
energy.
Slides
8
&
9
introduce
internal
energy.
Slides
10
&
11
introduce
gravitational
energy.
4. Student
Practice
of
Energy
Pie
Charts
(Slides
12
33)
The
following
slides
are
meant
as
individual/group
practice
for
the
students.
The
students
should
be
given
whiteboards
and
markers
to
draw
their
energy
pie
charts.
After
each
example,
students
can
stand
and
share
their
ideas
with
the
class.
There
is
not
enough
time
to
do
all
of
the
practice
problems;
the
teacher
can
decide
the
pace
based
on
the
students
progress.
Some
specific
slides
worth
considering
are:
Slides
20
&
21
and
28
&
29
because
they
relate
to
Period
5s
lab.
Slides
32
&
33
because
they
introduce
chemical
energy.
5. Introduce
Energy
Bar
Charts
(Slides
34
35)
These
slides
introduce
Energy
Bar
Charts
which
are
used
to
make
comparative
analysis
of
the
energy
moving
through
a
system,
including
defining
the
system
and
work
done
to
and
by
the
system.
6. Student
Practice
of
Energy
Bar
Charts
(Slides
36
41)
The
following
slides
are
meant
as
individual/group
practice
for
the
students.
The
students
should
be
given
whiteboards
and
markers
to
draw
their
energy
bar
charts.
After
each
example,
students
can
stand
and
share
their
ideas
with
the
class.
There
is
not
enough
time
to
do
all
of
the
practice
problems;
the
teacher
can
decide
the
pace
based
on
the
students
progress.
7. Additional
Practice
(Slide
42)
This
is
the
section
of
the
book
that
relates
to
this
lesson
(pages
83
84
and
questions
6.9
6.14).
Depending
on
the
progress
of
the
class,
this
can
be
assigned
to
all
students,
some
students,
or
given
as
optional
practice.
Period
4
GPS
&
KE
Equations:
1. IGCSE
Physics
Question
of
the
Day
(Slides
1
&
2)
The
IGCSE
Question
of
the
Day
is
a
short
activity
for
the
beginning
of
class.
I
usually
review
previous
lessons
and
familiarizes
students
with
the
Paper
1
of
the
IGCSE
exam.
2. Gravitational
Energy
Equation
and
Practice
(Slides
4
6)
Refer
to
the
Gravitational
Potential
Energy
Demonstration/Discussion
during
Period
1
and
remind
the
students
of
the
factors
that
affect
the
quantity
of
gravitational
energy.
Discuss
the
affect
of
changing
(i.e.
doubling
or
halving)
mass
or
height
on
gravitational
energy.
Discuss
how
to
find
mass
or
height
based
on
the
other
quantities.
Apply
the
equation
to
a
real
life
example
(including
a
video).
3. Kinetic
Energy
Equation
and
Practice
(Slides
7
9)
Refer
to
the
Kinetic
Energy
Demonstration/Discussion
during
Period
1
and
remind
the
students
of
the
factors
that
affect
the
quantity
of
kinetic
energy.
Discuss
the
affect
of
changing
(i.e.
doubling
or
halving)
mass
or
velocity
on
kinetic
energy.
Discuss
how
to
find
mass
or
velocity
based
on
the
other
quantities.
Apply
the
equation
to
a
real
life
example
(including
a
video).
4. Elastic
Energy
Equation
and
Practice
(Slides
10
12)
Refer
to
the
Elastic
Energy
Demonstration/Discussion
during
Period
1
and
remind
the
students
of
the
factors
that
affect
the
quantity
of
elastic
energy.
Discuss
the
affect
of
changing
(i.e.
doubling
or
halving)
spring
constant
or
extension
on
kinetic
energy.
Discuss
how
to
find
spring
constant
or
extension
based
on
the
other
quantities.
Apply
the
equation
to
a
real
life
example
(including
a
video).
5. Application
of
Energy
Equations
to
Conservation
of
Energy
and
Real-Life
Situations
(Slides
13
16)
These
slides
involve
two
interesting
real-life
applications
introduced
through
videos.
In
each
case,
the
teacher
can
provide
the
students
with
additional
information,
if
requested.
6. Additional
Practice
(Slide
17)
This
is
the
section
of
the
book
that
relates
to
this
lesson
(pages
87
90
and
questions
6.15
6.21).
Depending
on
the
progress
of
the
class,
this
can
be
assigned
to
all
students,
some
students,
or
given
as
optional
practice.
Period
5
Conservation
of
Energy
Lab:
1. IGCSE
Physics
Question
of
the
Day
(Slides
1
&
2)
The
IGCSE
Question
of
the
Day
is
a
short
activity
for
the
beginning
of
class.
I
usually
review
previous
lessons
and
familiarizes
students
with
the
Paper
1
of
the
IGCSE
exam.
2. Conservation
of
Energy,
No
Friction
vs.
Friction
(4
&
5)
These
slides
are
used
to
make
comparative
analysis
of
energy
pie
charts
where
friction
is
ignore
and
where
friction
is
included.
The
class
discusses
the
value
of
including
or
excluding
friction
and
internal
energy.
The
laboratory
experiment
is
introduced
to
identify
the
effect
of
friction
and
internal
energy
within
a
system.
3. Conservation
of
Energy
Lab
(6
&
7)
This
portion
of
the
task
depends
on
the
available
resources
and
the
students
familiarity
with
technology.
Two
versions
of
the
lab
are
included.
In
the
first
version,
the
students
will
use
a
motion
detector
(connected
to
a
computer
running
Vernier
Logger
Pro)
to
measure
the
position
and
velocity
of
a
ball
that
has
been
thrown
upward.
They
will
use
the
data
to
analyze
the
gravitational,
kinetic,
total,
and
internal
energy
at
several
stages
and
identify
the
effect
of
energy
lost
within
the
system.
In
the
second
version,
students
will
roll
a
ball
bearing
down
a
quarter
pipe
and
identify
its
gravitational,
kinetic,
and
internal
energy
at
several
points.
4. Additional
Practice
(Slide
8)
This
is
the
section
of
the
workbook
that
provides
additional
practice
for
all
of
the
weeks
lessons
(pages
45
51).
Depending
on
the
progress
of
the
class,
part
or
all
of
this
can
be
assigned
to
all
students,
some
students,
or
given
as
optional
practice.