Most physics teachers find out students are lost on momentum after the test. Physics exit tickets flip that timeline — the last 3 minutes of class become your early-warning system, and you get the data while you can still do something about it. This post breaks down exactly how to build high-leverage exit tickets for physics, what questions actually reveal misconceptions (versus just checking whether kids did the reading), and how to make the whole system take less than 5 minutes of class time. What Makes a Physics Exit Ticket Actually Useful A generic exit ticket asks, "What did you...
Here's the truth about physics review games: the best ones don't feel like review at all. Students think they're competing, escaping, or beating the clock—and the actual learning sneaks in through the side door. If your unit-test scores keep telling you the kids "knew it last week," the problem usually isn't the content. It's that passive review—re-reading notes, redoing the worksheet—doesn't force retrieval. Below are five physics review games that do force it, plus exactly how to run each one without burning a week of prep, and the three mistakes that quietly kill most review games. Why physics review games...
Hook: Physics review games can save a class period that would otherwise die the second you say, "We're reviewing for the test today." If your students shut down during packet review but wake up when there is a timer, a challenge, or a little competition, you are not imagining it. The good news is that you do not need a giant prep load to make review more effective. A few smart structures can turn the same content into something students actually want to finish. Below, you'll find practical physics review games for high school that work in real classrooms, plus...