Preface
Preface
This instructional material is provided through a Texas Education Agency (TEA) initiative to provide high-quality open-source instructional materials to districts free of charge. Funds were allocated for the open-source instructional materials by the 84th Texas Legislature (2015) which directed the agency to set aside $5,000,000 from the state instructional materials fund in each fiscal year of the biennium for state-developed open-source instructional materials and specified that the request should prioritize advanced secondary courses supporting the study of science, technology, engineering, and mathematics.
Through a request for proposal (RFP) process, the agency called for materials in the following sets of courses:
- High school math courses identified in Texas Administrative Code (TAC), Title 19, Chapter 111 (http://ritter.tea.state.tx.us/rules/tac/chapter111/index.html)
- High school science courses identified in 19 TAC, Chapter 112 (http://ritter.tea.state.tx.us/rules/tac/chapter112/index.html)
- High school technology applications courses identified in 19 TAC, Chapter 126 (http://ritter.tea.state.tx.us/rules/tac/chapter126/index.html)
- Career and technical education (CTE) courses identified in 19 TAC, Chapter 130, Subchapter O (http://ritter.tea.state.tx.us/rules/tac/chapter130/ch130o.html)
The RFP resulted in the award of two contracts for open-source materials, one to OpenStax (Rice University) and one to Study Edge (University of Florida).
OpenStax created materials for seven courses:
- Statistics
- Advanced Placement Macroeconomics
- Advanced Placement Microeconomics
- Advanced Placement Physics 1
- Advanced Placement Physics 2
- Physics
- Advanced Placement Biology
Each set of materials created by OpenStax is organized into units and chapters and can be used like a traditional textbook as the entire syllabus for each course. They can also be accessed in smaller chunks for more focused use with a single student or an entire class. All materials are available free of charge through the Texas Gateway.
Qualified and experienced Texas faculty were involved throughout the development process, and the textbooks were reviewed extensively to ensure effectiveness and usability in each course. Reviewers considered each resource’s clarity, accuracy, student support, assessment rigor and appropriateness, alignment to TEKS, and overall quality. Their invaluable suggestions provided the basis for continually improved material and helped to certify that the books are ready for use. The writers and reviewers also considered common course issues, effective teaching strategies, and student engagement to provide instructors and students with useful, supportive content and drive effective learning experiences.
Instructional Support Ancillaries for TEA Physics
The following materials are available to support instruction of TEA Physics:
- TEA Physics Lab Manual
- TEA Physics PowerPoint Slides
- TEA Physics Instructor’s Solution Manual
- TEA Physics Alignment Map
If you are an instructor and want to obtain these ancillaries, please use your official school email to send a request to the TEA using the following email address:
open-sourceinstructionalmaterials@tea.texas.gov
Please include information about the title for which you need ancillary materials.
About Physics
Physics covers the scope and sequence requirements of a typical one-year physics course. The text provides comprehensive coverage of physical concepts, quantitative examples and skills, and interesting applications. High School Physics has been designed to meet and exceed the requirements of the relevant Texas Essential Knowledge and Skills (TEKS), while allowing significant flexibility for instructors.
Content requirements for Physics are prescribed in “Chapter 112. Texas Essential Knowledge and Skills for Science, Subchapter C. High School, 112.39. Physics, Beginning with School Year 2010-2011 (One Credit)” (http://ritter.tea.state.tx.us/rules/tac/chapter112/ch112c.html#112.39).
Coverage and Scope
Physics presents physical laws, research, concepts, and skills in a logical and engaging progression that should be familiar to most physics faculty. The textbook begins with a general introduction to physics and scientific processes, which is followed by several chapters on motion and Newton’s laws. After mechanics, the students will move through thermodynamics, waves and sound, and light and optics. Electricity and magnetism and nuclear physics complete the textbook.
Pedagogical Foundation and Features
Physics uses a friendly voice and exciting examples that appeal to a high school audience. The Chapter Openers, for example, include thought-provoking photographs and introductions that connect the content to experiences relevant to student’s lives.
Differentiated Instruction
The writing in our program has been developed with universal design in mind to ensure students of all different backgrounds are reached. Content can be accessed through engaging text, informative visuals, hands-on activities, and online simulations. This diversity of learning media presents a wealth of reinforcement opportunities that allow students to review material in a new and fresh way.
Features
- Snap Labs give students the opportunity to experience physics through hands-on activities. The labs can be completed quickly and rely primarily on readily available materials so that students can do them at home as they read.
- Worked Examples promote both analytical and conceptual skills. In each example, the scenario/application is first introduced, followed by a description of the strategy used to solve the problem that emphasizes the concepts involved. These are followed by a fully worked mathematical solution and a discussion of the results.
- Reading Features
- Fun in Physics: feature physics applications in various entertainment industries
- Work in Physics: explore careers in physics as well as other careers that routinely employ physics
- Boundless Physics: reveal frontiers in physical knowledge and descriptions of cutting-edge discoveries in physics
- Links to Physics: highlight connections of physics to other disciplines
- Interactive Features
- Watch Physics: support student’s understanding of conceptual and computational skills using world-renowned Khan videos
- Virtual Physics: provide inquiry and discovery-based learning by providing a virtual “sandbox” where students can experiment with simulated physics scenarios and equipment using the University of Colorado-developed PhET simulations
- Tips for Success offer students advice on how to approach content or problems.
Practice and Assessment
Physics offers a wealth of assessment options:
- Grasp Checks are formative assessments that review the comprehension of concepts and skills addressed through reading features, interactive features, and snap labs.
- Practice Problems challenge students to apply concepts and skills they have seen in a Worked Example to solve a problem.
- Check Your Understanding are conceptual questions that, together with the practice problems, provide formative assessment on key topics in each section.
Chapter Review includes:
- Conceptual questions that challenge students’ ability to explain what they have learned conceptually, independent of the mathematical details
- Problems that challenge students to apply both concepts and skills to solve mathematical physics problems
- Critical thinking conceptual questions or problems that challenge students to apply concepts and skills to new situations
- Performance Tasks that challenges students to apply the content and skills they have learned to find a solution to a practical situation Test Prep helps prepare students to successfully respond to the format and rigor of standardized tests. The test prep includes multiple choice, short answer, and extended response items.
About Our Team
Core Reviewers
Fatih Gozuacik, Harmony Public Schools
Fatih Gozuacik holds master’s degrees in physics and atomic physics from Texas A&M Commerce and Sakarya University in Turkey. In addition to teaching AP and College Physics at Harmony Public Schools, he is a mentor for the Physics Bowl and the Science Olympiad, and serves as a college counselor for junior and senior students. Fatih was named the 2015 STEM teacher of the year by Educate Texas.
Denise Pattison, Hardin-Jefferson, High School
Denise Pattison was born and raised in Lumberton, Texas. She graduated from Lamar University - Beaumont in 2004 with a degree in science, and teaches Physics, Pre AP Physics, and IPC Physics at Hardin-Jefferson High School. She loves teaching because it offers the opportunity to make a difference in a person’s life.
Catherine Tabor, Northwest Early High School
Catherine Tabor holds Bachelors degrees in Mathematics and Physics, a Master’s degree in Physics and am currently working towards a PhD in Computer Science. She has been teaching for over twenty years, holding positions at a number of high schools in El Paso and colleges including Evergreen State and UT El Paso. At Northwest Early HS, she currently teaches Astronomy, AP Physics, and AP Computer Science.
High-School Teacher Reviewers
Bryan Callow, Lindenwold High School, Lindenwold, NJ
John Boehringer, Prosper High School, Prosper, TX
Wade Green, Stony Point High School, Round Rock, TX
Susan Vogel, Rockwall-Heath High School, Heath TX
Stan Hutto, Southwest Christian School, TX
Richard Lines, Garland High School, Garland, TX
Penny McCool, Robert E Lee High School and the STEM Academy PreAP
Loren Lykins, Science Department Chairman—Carlisle Independent School District, TX
Janie Horn, Cleveland High School, Magnolia, TX
Sean Oshman, Garland Independent School District, TX
Cort Gillen, Cypress Ranch High School, TX