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Research Brief

Students must learn to make assumptions to solve "real-world" physics problems

August 1, 2011
Transitioning from textbook-style problems to ""real-world"" physics problem-solving requires participants to set limiting assumptions. In textbook-style questions these assumptions aren't necessary because all the numerical values are provided by the textbook. However, in real-world challenges this is often not the case. The article has implications for educators who are thinking about how to use real-world problems in their work.

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    Author
    University of Washington
  • Citation

    Discipline: Education and learning science | Physics
    Audience: Educators/Teachers | Museum/ISE Professionals | Evaluators

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