James M. Hill

Student creativity at work

Posted: April 12, 2016

Nailed it.

Another attempt didn't work out as planned for these students.  Also, it may not be a good idea to ride a rollar coaster on the send attempt either.

Posted: April 12, 2016

Never go on a roller coaster the first time as there may need to be some adjustments to avoid crashing.  Students tested out many different set ups during activities at the North Shore Regional Elementary STEM Fair held at Terry Fox Elementary in Bathurst.

Posted: April 12, 2016

After tweeks and adjustments, students try again to have the truck survive the loop during this North Shore Regional Elementary STEM Fair activity.

Posted: April 12, 2016

These students were able to have the car travel at just the right speed to successfully land this jump during this North Shore Regional Elementary STEM Fair activity.

Posted: April 12, 2016

After a failed attempt these students were successful in making the loop during the North Shore Regional Elementary STEM Fair.

Posted: April 12, 2016

Improvement comes from many test runs.  Here students kept working on getting their car through the loop during activities at the North Shore Regional Elementary STEM Fair.

Posted: April 12, 2016

Trying for the double loop...

This activity was part of the North Shore Regional Elementary STEM Fair held at Terry Fox Elementary in Bathurst.  Students were challenged to build structures and launchers to propel cars over ramps, up a wall, and around loops.  Students displayed excellent reasoning skills as they made many...

Posted: February 29, 2016

Throughout physics courses this year students are working on various projects that require a scientific experiment or invetigation.  Many students chose to perform a motion analysis of one or more objects.  Objects varied from hitting a golfball, throwing a pitch, kicking a soccerball, shooting a basketball or dropping a ball from various heights.  Students had to record this motion, some chose to use their own smartphones, while others made use of the Edgertronic Slow Motion Camera.  To record the motion of an object students had to consider and problem solve many factors such as lighting, focus, timing, angles and location.  Images can be found here: http://stemnorth.nbed.nb.ca/james-m-hill/gallery/motion-analysis-slow-mo...

Once recorded students used the Tracker Video Analysis and Modelling Tool to track the motion of the object in the video.  That process required students to learn and review concepts like frame of reference, coordinate systems, scale ratios and mathematical modeling.  Once tracked the program allows for many variables to be analyzed graphically through a mathematical fit.  The entire process was repeated so there were at least four separate analyses.  That purpose was to provide students with an opportunity to learn and review a relevant statistical analysis that used means, standard deviations, and percent errors.  Students had to know whether their findings were precise, accurate, neither or both through a quantitative means.

All of this had to be formally written in a final report that included an abstract, images, graphs and tables of results.  Students had to reflect upon their investigation for an error an analysis and the significance of their work in their conclusion.

The Edgertronic Slow Motion Camera was generously provided through a Brilliant Labs project and has allowed for high definition recordings of nature and without it much of this project would be of lower quality.  Students have an oppotunity to slow down events that occur very quickly and put them under a scientific lens.

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Added: Tue, Apr 12 2016
Second Attempt....Well, crashes in slow motion are cool
Testing is Important!
Loop-the-Loop