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AP Physics

AP Physics. Overview. Quick overview. Physics concepts relate to matter and energy Motion, forces, energy, sound, light, electricity, magnetism, etc. Mathematics is an essential part of the class AP Physics B is non-Calculus Mathematics include algebra, basic geometry, and some trigonometry

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AP Physics

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  1. AP Physics Overview

  2. Quick overview • Physics concepts relate to matter and energy • Motion, forces, energy, sound, light, electricity, magnetism, etc. • Mathematics is an essential part of the class • AP Physics B is non-Calculus • Mathematics include algebra, basic geometry, and some trigonometry • AP Physics C is Calculus-based • Calculus is used along with the math used in AP Physics B

  3. Breakdown of the Test • The AP Physics B test is broken down as follows: • Newtonian Mechanics 35% • Fluid mechanics and thermal physics 15% • Electricity and magnetism 25% • Waves and optics 15% • Atomic and nuclear physics 10%.

  4. Breakdown of the Test • AP Physics C has two parts, each lasting a ½ of a year and has its own tests: Mechanics and Electricity and Magnetism • The Mechanics test is broken down as follows: • Newtonian Mechanics 100% • All Newtonian mechanics covered in AP Physics B are covered here along with additional material • The Electricity and Magnetism test is broken down as follows: • Electricity and magnetism 100% • All E&M topics covered in AP Physics B are covered along with additional material

  5. AP Physics B Test • Divided into two 90 minute sessions • Each session is equally weighted • Multiple choice • Approximately 70 questions • No calculator or formula sheet allowed • Free Response • A combination of 10 and 15-point questions • Questions are graded by rubric • The correct answer is a small percentage of these points • Calculators and formula sheets are allowed

  6. AP Physics C Test • Divided into two 45 minute sessions • Each session is equally weighted • Multiple choice • Approximately 35questions • No calculator or formula sheet allowed • Free Response • Generally three 15-point questions • Questions are graded by rubric • The correct answer is a small percentage of these points • Calculators and formula sheets are allowed

  7. Labs • Labs will help in understanding concepts covered in class • The College Board requires all AP Physics students to maintain a lab notebook • Labs will hold a proportionate of the average for the class • Additionally, some free-response questions are a type in which you must right up a lab

  8. “More than one way to skin a cat” • In many cases, there will be more than one way to solve the same problem • Example: one student may use a kinematics equation to solve a problem and another may use an energy equation • BEWARE – the sooner that you use insert numbers into a problem, the more likely to get significant rounding errors causing an answer to be wrong

  9. Alphabet soup • There will be many different letters used to for units and for variable • Some letters may stand for more than one thing • Various problems will only use letters (no numbers) • Understanding the letters is a key part to solving problems

  10. “It’s all Greek to me” • Among the letters you will learn will be included multiple letters from the Greek alphabet • Examples include: Σ, Ω, α, β, ω, θ, μ, etc, etc. • Like the regular letters, there may be one or more Greek letters that will be used for more than one thing

  11. Equations • Like letters, there will be lots and lots of formulas/equations • Learning how to manipulate formulas is a key skill in solving problems • Some free-response questions ask you to take basic formulas and to derive a different formula to use

  12. Not an Army unit • Use of correct units is an important component of problem solving • Knowing what each unit is and what variable it is used for will be of great help in solving problems • Though most problems use SI units (ie metric), some problems do use imperial units • There may be conversion between the two

  13. Sleight of hand • One ½ of the AP test does not allow a calculator and • The other ½ gives points based on the work shown • So, showing all of your work is important • Circle or box all answers • Cross out any work or answers that you don’t want included • Anything erased must be completely erased

  14. Graphs • Creation and analysis of graphs is another component of the class • Some questions on the test will be graph-based • Graphs done in labs will be scatter plots with best-fit lines • Lines will be used to make an equation in order to make predictions • Tips • Label axis • Include units • Use good scaling • Use large enough graph area

  15. AP testing conventions • Include units with every step • Make sure to include the formula(s) that you are using • Scientific notation not normally used for numbers under 100 • No penalty for guessing

  16. AP testing conventions • If it can’t be read, it won’t be graded • Even writing some parts of an answer can earn points • Trend is to have problems with no numbers so that the answers use variables only

  17. Helpful hints • Don’t plug in numbers until you have to • Don’t round until the end of the problem • Use drawings to help understand what is going on

  18. Secrets of Success • Come to class • Ask questions if you don’t understand • Take responsibility for yourself • Take advantages of opportunities to improve • Keep a positive attitude • Work outside of class time

  19. Staying positive • Physics is a hard class but… • That makes you the bravest and the brightest students in the school • “It's supposed to be hard. If it wasn't hard, everyone would do it. The hard... is what makes it great.” – Tom Hanks, A League of Their Own • So, keep your head up. Everything will be ok and you will set yourself up for greatness.

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