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arXiv:1501.02858

Using Tracker to understand toss up and free fall motion: a case study

Tracker video analysis for toss-up and free-fall motion

TrackerKinematicsFree fall
Using Tracker to understand toss up and free fall motion: a case study
Tracker video analysis makes vertical motion measurable frame by frame.

Research Digest

This paper is a classroom case for helping beginning physics students connect a real video of vertical motion with displacement-time and velocity-time representations. The useful classroom idea is not merely to show a video, but to let students measure, fit, and then model the motion so that acceleration due to gravity becomes an evidence-based claim.

Use It Tomorrow

Use a short toss-up or free-fall clip. Ask students to track the object, inspect the velocity-time graph, and explain why the slope stays nearly constant even though the direction of velocity changes.

Pedagogical Move

After analysis, ask students to build or compare a simple dynamic particle model. This shifts the task from reading a graph to explaining why the graph has that shape.

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: Tracker makes the toss-up motion visible as measured position-time data, velocity-time data, fitted curves, and an acceleration estimate.
  2. Variable: Change the time interval or fit region first; keep the scale calibration, coordinate direction, tracked point, and frame rate fixed.
  3. Claim: Students can claim that the object has approximately constant downward acceleration, while acknowledging video-tracking uncertainty and air resistance.