Qualitative observations in university physics laboratories: an example from classical mechanics
K. Dunnett, M. H. Magnusson

TL;DR
This paper presents a qualitative approach to physics experiments in undergraduate labs, emphasizing observation and student autonomy over quantitative results, to enhance learning and experimental skills.
Contribution
It introduces a novel qualitative experiment in classical mechanics that fosters student observation, independent thinking, and flexible note keeping, diverging from traditional quantitative-focused labs.
Findings
Students can identify interesting qualitative behaviors in experiments.
Qualitative observation enhances student engagement and understanding.
Flexible note keeping supports independent experimental development.
Abstract
One of the key skills of a researcher is noticing what's going on. Both in the experiment one's performing and in one's data: is there something interesting, reason to doubt one's data or suspect that one's theoretical description is insufficient? Many experiments developed for undergraduate teaching still focus on quantitative evaluation. Here we take an alternative approach where careful observation identifies the interesting qualitative behaviour of a ball dropped with a water bottle balanced on top of it, but where numerical agreement with a simple theoretical model is impossible. Thus 'success' occurs when students are satisfied with their efforts and the development of their experimental process. Laboratory note keeping can also be introduced in a meaningful, non-formulaic way since students are making independent observations and method changes. We describe pedagogical and…
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