Notes:
The 3D Ray Diagram Interactive is an adjustable-size file that displays nicely on smart phones, on tablets such as the iPad, on Chromebooks, and on laptops and desktops. The size of the Interactive can be scaled to fit the device that it is displayed on. The compatibility with smart phones, iPads, other tablets, and Chromebooks make it a perfect tool for use in a 1:1 classroom.
Teaching Ideas and Suggestions:
This Interactive could be used at just about any stage of a learning cycle on lenses. The Interactive excels at demonstrating how the characteristics of the image are dependent upon the location of the object. It is also quite useful in depicting the ray diagrams for object locations in front of converging and diverging lenses. Instructors who use this simulation in their classrooms should give careful thought to the appropriate balance between hands-on lab experiences and the use of computer simulations.
Related Resources
There are numerous resources at The Physics Classroom website that serve as very complementary supports for the 3D Ray Diagram Interactive. These include:
- Minds On Physics Internet Modules:
The Minds On Physics Internet Modules include a collection of interactive questioning modules that help learners assess their understanding of physics concepts and solidify those understandings by answering questions that require higher-order thinking. Assignments RL7, RL8, RL9, RL10, and RL11 of the Refraction and Lens module provide great complements to this Interactive. They are best used in the middle to later stages of the learning cycle. Visit the Minds On Physics Internet Modules.
- Curriculum/Practice: Several Concept Development worksheets at the Curriculum Corner will be very useful in assisting students in cultivating their understanding, most notably ...
Lenses
Ray Diagrams for Converging Lenses
Ray Diagrams for Diverging Lenses
Lenses and Mirrors - Applying Concepts
Lens Practice
Visit the Curriculum Corner.
- Labwork:
Simulations should always support (never supplant) hands-on learning. The Laboratory section of The Physics Classroom website includes several hands-on ideas that complement this Interactive. Three notable lab ideas include ...
Exploring Lens Lab
The L•O•S•T Art of Image Description
Lens Equation Lab
Visit The Laboratory.
- Science Reasoning Activities:
Science classrooms should be filled with reasoning activities. There are one related activity in the Refraction section of the Science Reasoning Center that will challenge students to employ close reading, data analysis, and logical reasoning. The activity is named ...
Lens Magnification Lab
Visit the Science Reasoning Center.
Additional resources and ideas for incorporating 3D Ray Diagram into an instructional unit on lenses can be found at the
Teacher Toolkits section of The Physics Classroom website. Visit
Teacher Toolkits.
Credits
We owe a special thanks to Physics teacher Martin Kirby for donating the 3D Ray Diagram Simulator to our Interactives collection. If you like this sim, you can tap on the
Donate button and buy him a cup of coffee (or a pot of coffee); he'd appreciate it. Martin has contributed many other simulations to our Interactives collection. You can view them all by visiting our page listing all
Martin Kirby Simulations. Or visit Martin's website (
https://sites.google.com/a/kirbyx.com/) to learn more.