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Physics Honors – Final Exam

December 18, 2011 Leave a comment

It’s that time of year again! It’s that magical moment when every student has the chance to show, in written form, how much they have learned this semester in physics. Well, that’s the theory at least… So, let’s move on to the details.

  • The exam will cover all topics from first semester, (see the course textbook.)
  • Questions will be drawn from the first six sections of the practice problems in the textbook.
  • You may be required to use a school-issued calculator (please bring your calculator)
  • The exam will be worth 8% of your semester grade
  • You will be asked to show your work fully so please follow the model shown in class
  • You will be given the formula sheet from the course

The Five Question Topics on the Final Exam (in the order asked)

  • Conservation of Energy
  • Newton’s Laws
  • 2-D Motion
  • Vector Addition
  • Conservation of Momentum
Categories: Physics Honors Tags: , ,

AP Chemistry – Fall Final Exam

December 18, 2011 Leave a comment

The final exam will take place on Monday, December 19th in the SHP cafeteria. Here are the details of the final exam.

  • The exam will consist of four AP-style problems
  • The exam will cover the first eight chapters of the course (through periodicity)
  • You will be required to use a school-issued calculator
  • The problems will be similar to but not the same as issued AP problems
  • The exam will be worth 8% of your semester grade

The Four Questions on the Final Exam

  • Gases and Reactions
  • Electronic Structure and the Periodic Table
  • Thermodynamics and Heats of Reaction
  • Solution Stoichiometry

Got Finals?

Over the past few weeks, I have been reflecting on what is appropriate to include on the final exam for physics honors this semester. It might surprise you to know that teachers often circle back to what seem to be basic questions. As  I have moved through my career I notice that it is easy to become the teacher that I saw in front of me when I was a student: to teach as I was taught provides me with an instant justification for anything that I do. So then the answer to any question about pedagogy could become: because that’s what works. But how do I really know what works?

It is within this context that I take on the question about final exams. It seems as though I catch myself in a sort of logic trap pondering what is appropriate and fair. On the one hand, the course – by its nature – is cumulative, with ideas from the first semester setting up and supporting those included in the second semester. Therefore, shouldn’t the exam cover material from both semesters of the course? Yet this view ignores the reality of being a student and creates the sort of unnecessary stress and panic that undermines whatever lofty I goal I think I am trying to achieve. Who am I kidding? My students didn’t leisurely choose this course because they have a love of science: it follows chemistry.

So let’s go back to the beginning: what is the intent of a final exam? To be honest, I have answered this question differently throughout the years. It has been the “test to end all tests,” with questions that include everything from Kinematics and Newton’s Laws to Optics and General Relativity. It has been the exam that evaluates just the final topic covered in the course, supplanting a unit exam for a given topic. I have used a variety of formats ranging from pure multiple choice (Scantron!) to those using only work-em-out questions. Heck, one year I recall that I gave a final exam that had 50 true-false questions! To be honest, that was a low point in my career in terms of testing and although I am not proud at all of the decision, it always brings me back to the question at hand: what is the goal of this test?

So let’s go with this idea: The goal of this exam is to provide an opportunity for students to show what they have learned this year in the course. Written this way, the task doesn’t seem so daunting – written this way, I can support my students in their efforts to be successful – written this way, the exam might not look like a punishment for taking a challenging class.

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