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Preview of Push or Pull? Motion Game with Spinner + Exit Tickets | NGSS K-PS2-1 Aligned

Push or Pull? Motion Game with Spinner + Exit Tickets | NGSS K-PS2-1 Aligned

Teach forces and motion with fun, hands-on learning!This "Move It!" Interactive Science Game is designed to help young learners explore the concepts of push, pull, fast, and slow motion through an engaging spinner game, action cards, and movement path. Perfect for Kindergarten and 1st Grade classrooms, this activity aligns with NGSS standards (K-PS2-1 & K-PS2-2) and encourages physical movement, critical thinking, and science vocabulary development. ✅ What’s Included: Printable Spinner
Preview of Kinematic Equations and Motion Graphs Poster – High School Physics Guide

Kinematic Equations and Motion Graphs Poster – High School Physics Guide

Created by
PalEducation
This comprehensive high school physics reference poster presents all four kinematic equations (v = v₀ + at; Δx = v₀t + ½at²; v² = v₀² + 2aΔx; Δx = ½(v + v₀)t) alongside a complete guide to reading and interpreting position-time, velocity-time, and acceleration-time graphs. A decision flowchart at the bottom helps students identify which equation to use based on the missing variable. Perfect for: • High school physics and AP Physics kinematics units • Motion graphs and equations of motion instr
Preview of Speed Velocity Acceleration Poster – Motion Middle School Physics Anchor Chart

Speed Velocity Acceleration Poster – Motion Middle School Physics Anchor Chart

Created by
PalEducation
This colorful motion poster explains the difference between speed (scalar), velocity (vector), and acceleration (change in velocity), complete with formulas, distance-time graphs, and example calculations. Students see how each concept is graphed on distance-time plots and learn to calculate speed (d/t) and acceleration (Δv/t) with worked example problems. The memorable tagline — "Speed is HOW FAST, Velocity includes WHERE, Acceleration is the CHANGE!" — helps students keep the three concepts st
Preview of Balanced vs Unbalanced Forces Poster – Net Force Middle School Physics Science

Balanced vs Unbalanced Forces Poster – Net Force Middle School Physics Science

Created by
PalEducation
This clear, side-by-side comparison poster explains balanced and unbalanced forces with six illustrated examples: book on a table, pushing a shopping cart, tug-of-war tie, braking car, constant-speed vehicle, and turning bike. Each scenario shows the forces involved, net force calculation, and resulting motion. Students learn that balanced forces produce no change in motion (Fnet = 0) while unbalanced forces cause acceleration (Fnet ≠ 0). Perfect for: • Middle school and intro high s
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