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arXiv:1303.0081

Addressing learning difficulties in Newtons 1st and 3rd Laws through problem based inquiry using Easy Java Simulation

Inquiry for Newton's first and third laws

EJSNewton's LawsInquiry
Addressing learning difficulties in Newtons 1st and 3rd Laws through problem based inquiry using Easy Java Simulation
First page of the open-access paper, used as a direct visual cue for this research digest.

Research Digest

The paper targets persistent misconceptions about force pairs, motion, and interaction. EJS is used to make otherwise invisible relationships inspectable so students can test ideas instead of memorising law statements.

Use It Tomorrow

Use a scenario where students predict forces, run the model, and revise the force explanation. Include both bodies in every interaction diagram.

Pedagogical Move

Make students name the two objects in each action-reaction pair; this prevents the common error of placing both forces on one object.

Student Agency

Frame the task so students work like young scientists: they choose or justify the variable to test, make a prediction, collect evidence, defend a claim, and decide how to improve the model or investigation.

Discussion Prompts

  • What evidence does the model, video, or activity make visible?
  • Which variable should students change first, and what should they keep constant?
  • What claim can students make from the evidence, and what limitation should they acknowledge?
Reveal suggested answers
  1. Evidence: The EJS activity makes force arrows, interacting objects, motion changes, and action-reaction pairs visible for inspection.
  2. Variable: Change the interaction force or mass first; keep the pair of objects, contact situation, and diagram convention fixed.
  3. Claim: Students can claim that third-law forces act on different objects and are equal and opposite, while acknowledging that net force on one object determines its acceleration.