A Conversation for Talking Point - School Lessons

Physics

Post 1

Ralph the Wonder Llama and André the dodo; Excrement Occurs

is my all-time favourite subject at school. Mainly cos the teacher is a completely out-to-lunch frood.


Physics

Post 2

Frog_Perfect

My physics teacher is a wierdo, always philosophising about stuff... he's a geologist too, so he doesn't even undestand a lot of the physics. He looks like yoda, we think he may well be. Never mind, at least the other one gets it... it's like pure maths with her smiley - erm


Physics

Post 3

Lizzbett


I can remember my very first physics lesson when the teacher announced that boys were naturally good at physics but too lazy to do the coursework, whereas the girls were the hard working thickies who would do the coursework but fail the exams! Charming!

You wont be surprised to learn that I dropped physics at the first available opportunity.smiley - run

As an aside, I know people who have done classes at school simply called 'science' which appear to have consisted of physics, chemistry, biology and rural studies but at my school these were taught as four entirely separate subjects.


Physics

Post 4

Frog_Perfect

At GCSE I did "science double award" which consisted of the 3 major ones (though chemistry is really just physics for slow people smiley - tongueout), and every lesson we'd do the same experiment with those stupid ray boxes, and the exam was multiple choice. Needless to say I got a D for my coursework and an A overall.

smiley - towel


Physics

Post 5

Ralph the Wonder Llama and André the dodo; Excrement Occurs

We spend most of the time joking around in physics, but our teacher is a very good teacher too. Everyone gets high grades.


Physics

Post 6

BigAl Patron Saint of Left Handers Keeper of the Glowing Pickle and Monobrows

Ref Post 4, as I've said elsewhere, chemistry is THE CENTRAL SCIENCE, which interfaces closely with all the others, mathematics, biology, geology, engfineering....

It is also arguably the most diffiucult subject on the school curriculum because of the multitude of skills it demands: mathematics (for calculations) English Language (for describing/explaining) practical skills, cognitive skills because you are dealing with the 'nanoscale' i.e. things which you cannot see, and spatial awareness skills (to be able to visualise molecules in 3 dimensions). For these reasons, people with qualifications in vchemistry are extremely marketable in a whole gamut of career options.

smiley - biggrin


Physics

Post 7

Ged42

I used to get bored in science, because we never got to do any experiments. About once in a blue moon we would get to use the Van de Graff Generator, smiley - cool and maybe a petri dish with some mouldy bread in it, but that was it.

Where's all thhe bubbling liquids, crazy pipework, Tesla Coils going ZZZZZAAAAPPPP and cries of 'it's alive' and 'Mwah ha ha ha.' smiley - scientistsmiley - starsmiley - evilgrin


Physics

Post 8

Ralph the Wonder Llama and André the dodo; Excrement Occurs

smiley - ermThere is a theory that everything is derived from physics, including chemistry!


Physics

Post 9

BigAl Patron Saint of Left Handers Keeper of the Glowing Pickle and Monobrows

Yes, that's vtrue of course. But it's chemists who, in general, have the knowledge, vocabulary aand mathematical skills to interface with all other branhes of scoience.

smiley - biggrin


Physics

Post 10

XxDanni04xx

hi


Physics

Post 11

Jab [Since 29th November 2002]

"Hi" - on something? Yes, a way to describe the normal state most physics teachers. You'd expect it to be the chemist really?

It was in physics I learned just how dense some people can be. smiley - winkeye


Physics

Post 12

Ralph the Wonder Llama and André the dodo; Excrement Occurs

The physics department of our school exists to buy interesting and entertaining Devices.


Physics

Post 13

2 of 3

Physics.

My memory is that none of the experiments never worked as they should.

My favourite bit was the electricity experiments.


Physics

Post 14

Jab [Since 29th November 2002]

Yep, dense when it came to seting-up 'experiments' and needing a chemistry teacher to help. smiley - erm


Physics

Post 15

Ralph the Wonder Llama and André the dodo; Excrement Occurs

Anyone ever heard of a levitron?


Physics

Post 16

BigAl Patron Saint of Left Handers Keeper of the Glowing Pickle and Monobrows

Well' it's not a 'fundamental particle' for a start. It's a so-called 'anti-gravity top':

http://www.levitron.com/physics.html

smiley - biggrin


Physics

Post 17

Ralph the Wonder Llama and André the dodo; Excrement Occurs

My record is almost 3 minutes!


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