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Always, Sometimes, or Never True: Instructor's Guide

Main Ideas

Students' Task

Estimated Time: 60 minutes

Small groups of students are given an “Always, Sometimes, or Never True” handout and asked to decide if statements about four different scenarios are always, sometimes, or never true.

Prerequisite Knowledge

Props/Equipment

Activity: Introduction

Before performing this activity, a brief review of the first and second thermodynamic laws is helpful to put students in the right mindset. Students should be placed into small groups and given the activity handout. Before the groups begin analyzing the scenarios, be sure to emphasize that the first and second thermodynamic laws, the thermodynamic identity, and the internal energy expressions will lead to the answer for each statement.

If students are struggling to progress in the worksheet, bring the class back together and answer the statements in the first scenario using the thermodynamic laws so the groups have a solid example to refer to for future reasoning in the worksheet.

Activity: Student Conversations

Activity: Wrap-up

Bring the small groups back together as a class and ask which scenarios or statements were the most challenging and why. Because this worksheet is based on reasoning rather than computations that give a definitive answer, students often find this worksheet very difficult. Answering some of the more difficult statements at the end of the activity will help students follow the same reasoning to finish the worksheet later for additional practice in physical reasoning. Re-emphasize the the first and second laws of thermodynamics are just as important for making physical reasoning as they are for mathematical computations.

Extensions