I'm not saying it is necessairly good but that is the way the whole country is going and it isn't out to get asians as the user replied.Benny1103 said:Xayma are you saying that VCE physics does not appreciate the history of physics and that the change towards a more HSC-like physics is good? If so then lol...
I slightly disagree with you here, it should prepare them not just for university physics but give them general physics knowledge for their life, such as how motors and generators work as an example.Benny1103 said:High school physics, in my mind, is supposed to provide students with an introduction to, and preparation for, university level physics regardless of whether or not they intend to continue with physics at unversity.
That is already tested in the HSC under the subject Engineering Studies, alot of truss work is in there, as is 95% of that VCE section including more detailed stress/strain diagrams which in the VCE doesnt go into the physics behind it.Benny1103 said:For example, in the "Materials and Structures" section we get questions where students are required to explain which features of certain types of bridges make them more safe. Now that, is the type of explanation question that a real physics exam would have as it is actually relevant to the topic being tested. Notice how there are never questions such as 'give a brief description of how it was found that arched bridges are generally safer than simple straight bridges.' The reason for that is because the topic is titled "Materials and Structures" and not "The history and development of Materials and Structures."
When I said the VCE is headed along that path (although not as much as NSW is) I was mainly refering to the pilot program being tested at a few schools across Melbourne.Benny1103 said:Perhaps my example was a bit weird, I did not write out that question word for word. The question basically asks you to explain in terms of the material and structure of the birdge(photo given), what makes the bridge stable. Even though the 'expected' answer may not go into as much detail as you may expect, it still requires an explanation of how stone is strong under compression and reference to how the arch structure is such that arch forces are transferred into almost vertical components. So it is not completely unreasonable to expect high school students to understand the basics of topics in physics. As such, I cannot see why people would suggest that high school students can only handle learning about the history of physics rather than the fundamentals of actual topics.
My point is, the explanation questions in the VCE(at least at the moment) are actually relevant to the topic being tested. If there is a section with a title along the lines of "The Development of Newton's Laws of Motion" then I can understand why questions asking about it's history would come up. However, when a topic such as "Light and Matter"(in VCE) is being tested, I cannot see why questions on it's history should come up on an exam. I cannot see the point in having such questions.
Those are just my thoughts.
Sorry about the refrences to mathematics etc, they were to others who got caught up in the argument that started off addressed to you.Benny1103 said:The pilot program was implemented in a number of Victorian schools last year. However, it is now the physics which is studied. In other words, the 'normal' physics that Victorians did prior to this year has been completely replaced with the pilot physics studies. That, in my opinion, is not the best change that could have occurred but at least it does not affect me.
As for the Materials and Structures topic, yes, clearly it could be better suited to other subjects, but that is not the point. I only brought up the Materials and Structures section as an example. After all, I needed to use questions from a topic in the (former) VCE physics study design to illustrate my point that the 'old' VCE physics exams had, in my mind, questions which were more relevant to the topics being learned and tested. Perhaps I could have use a better example than a question from the Materials and Structures topic but again, that is not the point.
I am not saying that the HSC should definitely be more like how the 'old'(prior to this year) VCE physics was. I am just saying that I feel that the VCE physics exams have questions which are more relevant to what is being tested for the reasons I have previously stated. All I am saying is that I do not think that historical facts should not be as heavily tested as they are in the HSC. There is nothing wrong with having questions on an exam which require a written response but I really do not see the relevance of rote learning a whole bunch of historical facts.
Finally, I am not saying that HSC(or VCE) physics should be more 'mathematically based' - in fact I never even referred to the amount of maths that should be in either of the physics subjects in question. Rather, all I have really been talking about is the relevance of certain types of questions in high school physics exams.
zenger69 said:I've got a physics teacher who constantly says HSC Physics course isn't physics and that it's been multilated by the syllabus writers.
Do other people think it's true? and what arguments could I say to get him to shut up and get on with teaching?
i agree! the more maths the better!Emma-Jayde said:I think your teacher is right! HSC physics has been mutilated by the DET, it isn't real physics anymore, my teacher says the same thing. Real physics should involve more of the pure mathematics, not the history of physics. Speaking as a 4U maths student, I was actually quite disappointed when I found out that we weren't going to be using real maths.
Yeah, at least with Science/Maths your either right or wrong, there's no in-between, unlike English where its a matter of taste and scores can vary between teachers.FinalFantasy said:ahh, i hate english, i find science subjects much easier lol