Knowledge and Skills Statement
This standard provides students with common experiences and vocabulary to introduce Newton's Laws and the transfer of energy which causes motion. This standard also lays the foundation for net force diagrams in middle school. In grade 2, students design descriptive investigations to explore the differences in motion caused by different amounts of force. In grade 3, students relate the speed of an object to its mechanical energy. In grade 4, students investigate the transfer of energy by objects in motion. In grade 5, students synthesize their previous learning by exploring how the consistency of force applied to an object impacts the transfer of energy to the object and the resulting behavior of the object. In grade 6, students learn about specific forces and use the terms balanced and unbalanced to describe the sum of the forces acting on an object. In grade 7, students will use Newton's First Law of Motion to determine the effects of balanced and unbalanced forces on an object's motion.
In addition to investigating the effects of equal (consistent) and unequal (inconsistent) amounts of force, students might investigate multiple forces acting on the same object simultaneously.
It is helpful to understand the following patterns of motion that students might explore:
Motion of the object | Number of forces applied each time | Directions of multiple forces applied | Strength of the force(s) each time |
---|---|---|---|
The object moves in the direction of the force the same distance each time | Single | Not applicable | Equal |
The object moves in the direction of the force at a different distance each time | Single | Not applicable | Unequal |
No change in motion | Multiple | Opposite directions | Equal |
The combined force is smaller, and the object moves in the direction of the stronger force at different distances each time | Multiple | Opposite directions | Unequal |
Forces combine, and the object moves in the direction of the force the same distance each time | Multiple | Same direction | Equal |
Forces combine, and the object moves in the direction of the force at different distances each time | Multiple | Same direction | Unequal |