Title: VICTORIAN
1- VICTORIAN
- YOUNG
- PHYSICISTS
- TOURNAMENT
- An initiative of the Australian Institute of
Physics (Victorian Branch) Education Committee
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- An event for
- Year 11 Physics and
- Year 10 Science students
-
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- What do the students do?
- How do the students benefit?
- What is the teachers role?
- How does the teacher benefit?
- How much class time and out of class time is
needed? - How is the competition organised?
- Prizes
- Experiences so far.
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- What do the students do?
- In a team of three they conduct three open-ended
experimental investigations, - initially in class with follow up research in
their own time or as part of an activities
program, - and finally they prepare a PPT report, and
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- What do the students do?
- in competition
- They describe and defend their methods, results
and analysis, and - They challenge the reports of other teams.
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- There are three problems which the team should
investigate.
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- 1. Conductivity of pencil lines
- The lines, drawn by so-called lead pencils,
conduct electricity. - Investigate the factors that determine the
resistance of the line.
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- 2. Bouncing ball
- If you hold a Ping-Pong ball above the ground and
release it, it bounces. The nature of the
collision changes if the ball contains liquid. - Investigate how the nature of the collision
depends on the amount of liquid inside the ball
and other relevant parameters.
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- 3. Rubber motor
- A twisted rubber band stores energy and can be
used to power a model aircraft, for example. - Investigate the properties of such an energy
source and how its power output changes with time
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- How do the students benefit?
- They develop
- Experimental research skills,
- Presentation skills,
- Communication skills, and
- Social skills from working in a group.
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- What is the teachers role?
- Encourage student participation,
- Monitor progress,
- Supervise, when necessary, out of class
experimental activities - Attend competition
- Assist in judging
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- How does the teacher benefit?
- Student motivation,
- Increased prestige for teacher, subject and
school.
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- How much class time and
- out of class time is needed?
- Most investigations can be started as part of the
normal teaching program, - The topics minimise the need for out of class
supervision, - Monitoring of progress may require about an hour
or two per topic for three topics over the year.
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- How is the competition organised?
- Registration
- By the beginning of Term 4 schools will need to
register each team including the names of the
students. - There is no charge,
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- How is the competition organised?
- Competition Day
- Dates
- Tuesday, 2nd December for Year 10s
- Wednesday, 3rd December for Year 11s
- Venue Quantum Victoria, Macleod West
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- How is the competition organised?
- Competition Day
- The competition is run as a round robin.
- It consists of six 30 min sessions of Physics
Phytes. - Two teams participate in a Physics Phyte.
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- Competition
- Each team plays one of the two roles
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- Competition
- Role of Reporter
- The Reporter presents the essence of the solution
to the problem, attracting the attention of the
audience to the main physical ideas and
conclusions.
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- Competition
- The Role of the Opponent
- The Opponent puts questions to the Reporter and
criticises the report, pointing to possible
inaccuracies and errors in the understanding of
the problem and in the solution. - The Opponent analyses the advantages and
drawbacks of both the solution and the
presentation of the Reporter.
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- Competition
- Each role has a fixed time for its task and one
phyte should be completed within 30 minutes. - Each team has 6 phytes 3 as a Reporter, 3 as an
Opponent. - Each of the three students must report on one
topic and oppose on another.
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- Competition
- At the end of the day the two best teams compete
in a Final. - The final consists of two phytes with each team
being in turn, a reporter and an opponent.
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- Time allocation
- Activity min.
- Reporter prepares, plugs in USB etc. 3
- Reporter presents, 10
- Opponent asks clarifying questions. 2
- Opponent prepares. 3
- Opponent critiques report, then argues with
reporter. 10 - Reporter prepares concluding remarks. 1
- Reporter makes concluding remarks. 2
- Jury questions and grading. 4
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- Prizes
- A trophy to the school
- A book Flying Circus of Physics to each student
in the final - Money A cheque to all students
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- Websites
- www.vicphysics.org/vypt.html
- There are resources on the website
- to assist students and teachers with background
research and - To assist students in formulating an experimental
design.
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