In this lesson, learners demonstrate an understanding of force as a push or pull, the relationships among force, mass, and acceleration, the concept of inertia, action–reaction force pairs, and the role of net force in changing motion.
Students will be able to:
Reference: NCERT Book Alignment
The lesson is aligned with the NCERT Grade 9 Science Book-Chapter 8: Forces and Laws of Motion, Section : 8.2, 8.4, 8.5 Newton’s Laws of Motion.
By the end of the lesson, students will be able to:
In this session, students will discover that heavier objects are “harder to push,” moving objects keep rolling until friction stops them, and rockets move up while gases go down. This lesson channels those observations into a structured exploration of Newton’s Laws—building from curiosity to explanation through hands-on and virtual investigations.
| Title | Approximate Duration | Procedure | Reference Material |
|---|---|---|---|
| Engage | 5 |
| Slides |
| Explore | 10 | Station rotation: Push light vs heavy carts; Try starting/stopping both. | Slides |
| Explain | 10 | Teacher connects observations to Newton’s 3 laws; Introduce terms; inertia,net force, F = m x a, action -reaction pairs. Use diagrams + Virtual Lab: apply forces, vary mass, see accelerations; collision demo for action -reaction. | Slides + Virtual Lab |
| Evaluate | 10 | Students will attempt the Self Evaluation task on LMS.
| Virtual Lab |
| Extend | 5 | Scenario Thinking: Scenario discussion: Car crash → why seat belts matter? Rocket launch → which forces act? Students relate Newton’s Laws to sports, vehicles, and safety. Exit ticket: “One real-life example for each law.” | Slides |
In this session, learners will study about how objects at rest tend to stay at rest, and moving objects tend to keep moving—unless a force acts. But how much does motion change when we push harder? Why do we get pushed back when we push something? Sir Isaac Newton described three fundamental laws that explain almost all everyday motion—from rolling footballs to launching rockets.
What is a Force?
A force is a push or a pull that can change the state of motion of an object (start, stop, speed up, slow down, change direction) or deform it. When several forces act, it’s the net force that determines the motion change.
Newton’s First Law
An object at rest remains at rest, and an object in uniform motion continues in the same straight line unless acted upon by an unbalanced external force.
Newton’s Second Law (Force–Mass–Acceleration Relationship)
The acceleration of an object is directly proportional to the net force applied and inversely proportional to its mass.
Mathematically: F = m × a (in SI: N = kg × m/s²).
Newton’s Third Law (Action–Reaction)
For every action, there is an equal and opposite reaction. Forces come in pairs acting on different objects.
Examples: A swimmer pushes water backward; water pushes swimmer forward. Rocket exhaust pushes gases downward; gases push rockets upward.
Momentum (Extension / Enrichment)
Momentum (p) = mass × velocity.
Changes in momentum relate to force and time of impact (impulse). Seat belts and airbags increase time of stopping → reduce force on passengers. (Use in extension activities if time permits.)
Why Are Newton’s Laws Important?
This is the list of vocabulary terms used throughout the lesson.
Welcome to the Newton’s Laws Virtual Lab!
Explore how forces change motion by experimenting with boxes, balls, and surfaces. See how objects move differently on friction and non-friction surfaces, how force affects acceleration, and how every action has an equal and opposite reaction. Test your understanding with fun challenges and quizzes as you explore all three laws of motion!
Interactive Home Screen: Three clickable modules for the 3 laws of motion.
First Law (Inertia): Move a box on friction and non-friction surfaces to observe differences.
Second Law (Force & Acceleration): Adjust force slider to observe the object moving.
Third Law (Action–Reaction): Observe a ball hitting a wall with equal and opposite forces displayed.
MCQs and challenges integrated at the end of each module for engagement.
Step 1: Home screen displays 3 buttons – First Law, Second Law, Third Law. The user selects one to begin.
Step 2: In the First Law module, drag and push the box on a low-friction surface and observe motion.
Step 3: Switch to a high-friction surface and observe stopping behavior.
Step 4: Click Next to enter the Second Law module.
Step 5: Run simulation and view real-time calculation of acceleration (a = F/m).
Step 6: Click Next to enter the Third Law module.
Step 7: Launch a ball towards a wall and observe action-reaction force pairs.
Step 8: Complete the MCQ quiz for all three laws and view performance summary.
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