
Friction and Inclined Planes
Examining the effects of frictional forces on stationary and moving objects. Students solve problems involving particles on rough inclined planes.
About This Topic
Examining the effects of frictional forces on stationary and moving objects. Students solve problems involving particles on rough inclined planes.
Key Questions
- How does the coefficient of friction determine the limiting equilibrium of an object?
- How do we resolve forces parallel and perpendicular to an inclined plane?
- What conditions are necessary for an object to slide down a rough surface?
Planning templates for Applied Mathematics
5E Model
The 5E Model structures lessons through five phases (Engage, Explore, Explain, Elaborate, and Evaluate), guiding students from curiosity to deep understanding through inquiry-based learning.
Unit PlannerMath Unit
Plan a multi-week math unit with conceptual coherence: from building number sense and procedural fluency to applying skills in context and developing mathematical reasoning across a connected sequence of lessons.
RubricMath Rubric
Build a math rubric that assesses problem-solving, mathematical reasoning, and communication alongside procedural accuracy, giving students feedback on how they think, not just whether they got the right answer.
More in Dynamics
Newton's Laws of Motion
Applying Newton's laws to model the relationship between forces and the motion of particles. Students draw free-body diagrams to resolve forces.
2 methodologies
Connected Particles
Analysing systems of particles connected by light inextensible strings, including pulleys. Students calculate acceleration and tension in the strings.
2 methodologies