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PHY201
Your 'collaborative labs' report has been received. Scroll down through the document to see any comments I might have inserted, and my final comment at the end.
** Collaborative Labs_labelMessages.txt **
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You will participate during the semester in two series of collaborative lab activities.
The first is designed to be relatively painless, and to begin to develop a degree of teamwork and collaboration.
These activities are designed for teams of four individuals, each with a specific function:
•The designer will come up with the idea for the activity and will specify for other team members how the activity is to be conducted.
•The experimenter will follow the designer's instructions to set up the experiment and collect data.
•The analyzer will analyze the data.
•The interpreter will describe what the results mean.
For each series of activities, you will participate in four different investigations, one as designer, another as experimenter, another as analyzer and another as interpreter.
As each investigation progresses, you will follow the work of your fellow team members.
Please summarize the above, as best you can, in your own words:
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This exercise is designed to build teamwork, We will participate in four different labs, each time taking on a different role. As a designer, the person who comes up with idea of how to do the lab, a experimenter, the person who actually conducts the lab a record the results, a analyzer, the person who gathers the results and the analyzer who figures out what the results mean.
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The first series of activities will be spread out over the first half of the semester, the second series over the second half of the semester.
The first series will be based on systems you have seen in the Key Systems videos.
You will begin by describing at least three ideas for investigations related to the Key Systems videos. Valid ideas will ultimately be developed proposals, each of which will describe a question that could be investigated and tested using simple materials such as those seen in the videos. You will eventually develop three proposals, one of which will be chosen for an investigation. You will be the designer for that investigation.
At this point we're just beginning to explore ideas for the first series of investigations. Your instructor will work with you to further develop your ideas, and perhaps to explore other related possibilities.
Right now you don't have a wide variety of experimental techniques available to you, so this first series of investigations will be relatively simple.
List below three ideas for things you think might be fairly easy to test, based on the systems you have seen so far.
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What effect does time have on acceleration.
What is the relationship between frequency and oscillation.
How does friction affects speed.
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Discuss your first idea. How do you think it might be tested? What sort of items do you think might be required? How do you think your idea might be tested?
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Acceleration is the change in velocity with time. We use the same tools provided in the lab kit, the car build an incline. Take different readings with time being the only variant. we could change the time the car takes to roll don't the incline by giving some force behind it, then calculate the acceleration for each time.
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Discuss your second idea. How do you think it might be tested? What sort of items do you think might be required? How do you think your idea might be tested?
What is the relationship between frequency and oscillation.
This is merely and extension to the pendulum experiment. We already have the frequency that we gathered by dividing the amount of cycles completed in a minute, we could conduct the experiment again and graph the amount of oscillation vs. frequency.
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Discuss your third idea. How do you think it might be tested? What sort of items do you think might be required? How do you think your idea might be tested?
This experiment would be an extension of the first could place some kind of friction on the incline, salt or something. The repeat the experiment in part one and compare the results.
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Your instructor is trying to gauge the typical time spent by students on these activities. Please answer the following question as accurately as you can, understanding that your answer will be used only for the stated purpose and has no bearing on your grades:
•Approximately how long did it take you to complete this activity?
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Thanks. We should be following up on these ideas within the next couple of weeks.
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