Hi Caryl,

It's possible that the Physics Activity could get students interested in 
Physics, but the deepest and most important parts of real science cannot be 
learned from a book or a computer or from just doing mathematics no matter how 
wonderful. 

The notion that they can has been a major misconception for thousands of years, 
and is shockingly widespread in the US educational system. This is because all 
representation systems we use, including the ones inside our heads, are 
ultimately hermetic, and thus in the end are only about themselves.

Science is a kind of negotiation between our representation systems and "what's 
out there?". And the negotiation is always there. As Richard Feynmann liked to 
say "Science means you don't have to trust the experts".

This is why books, computers, math, etc., don't work. Because natural languages 
and math have negation, we can write just anything in a book. Because math 
depends on premises taken as given (called definitions in modern math) we can 
make a perfect logical system that has nothing to do with "what's out there?" 
(and many people have over the ages). 

Because we can make detailed maps of places which have never existed (e.g. 
Middle Earth) and can make perfect deductions from them (Gondor is North of Far 
Harad, and the Shire is North of Gondor, therefore the Shire is North of Far 
Harad, etc.) we have no way at all of knowing whether this map represents any 
thing "out there" or not unless we actually exhaustively look for it.

Telling children to learn what is in a book or computer model is absolutely no 
different from telling them to learn this catechism or that one. They have to 
be grounded in learning to deal with the actual world in ways that get around 
what's wrong with our perceptual systems and the minds attached to them.

Because scientific knowledge is now large, it is not possible to learn all of 
science from doing personal experiments. The major point here is that the 
"outlook" (simple name for "epistemological stance") of science has to be 
internalized before one can understand just how to garner scientific knowledge 
from writings rather from the real world.

Scientists (not just science teachers) have trouble with this, because our 
brains/minds are set up to believe not to understand or doubt. For example, in 
spite of the fact that the Victorian Brits considered Maxwell their best 
scientist (he was) they could not find it possible to get into Maxwell's 
Equations, in large part because they were non-Newtonian, and Newton had been 
made into a god that exemplified the "master race" that all such cultures love 
to think they are. And they were not going to go against their god. As a 
result, it was left to several prominent Germans, including Heinrich Hertz, to 
experiment with the ideas in the equations and to invent and build the first 
radio transmitter.

The fact that this happens doesn't make it excusable, but it does illustrate 
how hard real science is to really do -- and how difficult it is to teach and 
learn.

Very best wishes,

Alan





________________________________
From: Caryl Bigenho <[email protected]>
To: IAEP SugarLabs <[email protected]>
Sent: Tuesday, June 30, 2009 9:21:54 AM
Subject: [IAEP] Physics

 
Hi All,

I sent this yesterday, but it got filtered out by some machine since I didn't 
send it as a "reply".  So I am sending it again today.


This is the "old science teacher"
in me talking...I think the Physics Activity has great potential for getting
students interested in Physics and in thinking like scientists.  I
watched a 13-year-old girl play with it at the Bozeman LUG meeting last
week.  She loved experimenting with the shapes to see what they would
do.

How do scientists think and work?  They
observe, take notes, make predictions (hypotheses) test them, and
repeat.  This program is perfect for that!  We need someone to design
some simple experiments tied to curriculum goals that will help
students of various levels enjoy "playing scientist" with the Physics
Activity as they learn a tiny bit about physics and a lot about
thinking like a scientist.

I haven't played enough to know what all is included in the Activity.  Does it 
have, for example, the option of changing the "material" an object is "made 
of"?  


Caryl



      
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