Table of Contents

Navigate back to the activity.

WHICH WAY IS NORTH?

Essentials

Main ideas

Prerequisites

Warmup

Props

Wrapup

Details

In the Classroom

This activity is straightforward; students have few problems with it.

Question 3 asks whether any vector displacement be expressed as the sum of a vector pointing east and one pointing north. Many students are bothered by this, since they don't know whether they can use negative coefficients. We have deliberately left the question ambiguous in order to generate a short discussion about conventions. To the lay person, South is a different direction from North; in mathematics, these are not independent directions. We nonetheless accept both answers, provided a reasonable explanation is given.

Get students to answer the first two questions on the board — on the same diagram. Watch out! The second student often uses a different scale than the first; the resulting vectors won't agree. Not all students realize this is a problem! Asking how many libraries there are usually resolves this.

A good question to ask at the end is which representation of the vector displacement to the library is the most important. (The answer of course is that it depends on the question.)

Subsidiary ideas

Homework

(none yet)

Essay questions

(none yet)

Enrichment

1) This is not helped by the fact that the components of vectors are not scalars!