News — NGSS

Teaching Waves and Sound in High School Physics: Activities That Work

Hook: Your students hear sound every second of every day — yet most of them can't explain how it actually travels. That gap between intuition and understanding is exactly where a great waves and sound unit lives. In this post, you'll get a concrete, NGSS-aligned framework for teaching waves and sound to high school physics students. We'll cover the core concepts students struggle with most, hands-on activities that make abstract ideas tangible, and a few shortcuts that save you prep time without cutting corners. Why Waves and Sound Trip Students Up Here's the thing about waves: they're invisible. When you...

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How to Teach Projectile Motion: A Teacher-Tested Lesson Plan

Hook: Your students can solve F=ma problems all day long, but ask them which ball hits the ground first — one dropped straight down, one launched sideways — and half the room will get it wrong. Projectile motion is where physics stops being abstract and starts being unforgettable. If you've been searching for a projectile motion lesson plan that actually sticks, you're in the right place. Below you'll get a classroom-ready breakdown: the core concepts, common misconceptions students bring, hands-on activities that take 20 minutes or less, and a direct link to NGSS-aligned resources you can use tomorrow. Why Projectile...

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Teaching Electric Circuits: Series vs. Parallel and Activities

Hook: Most high school students think electricity is magic — flip a switch, light turns on. Teaching electric circuits means replacing that mental model with something real: charges flowing through paths they can trace, measure, and predict. If you've ever watched a student wire a series circuit, stare at a dead bulb, and say "it should work." — you know exactly where this is going. This post breaks down how to teach electric circuits so your students actually get it, from Ohm's Law to parallel vs. series, with classroom-ready activities you can use tomorrow. Why Electric Circuits Trip Up So...

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Energy Unit Made Easy: roller coaster diagram showing kinetic and potential energy transformation with equations KE=½mv² and PE=mgh

Energy Unit Made Easy: From Work to Conservation of Energy

Teaching the energy unit in high school physics can feel like a breath of fresh air after the heavy vector math of forces and kinematics. Energy is a scalar, which means no more breaking things into x and y components! But it also comes with its own set of challenges. Students often struggle to connect the abstract concept of "work" to the very real phenomena of kinetic and potential energy, and keeping track of energy transformations can get messy fast. If you're looking for ways to make your energy unit more engaging, hands-on, and conceptually clear, you're in the right...

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