Amplify: Forces and Motion Assessment

Amplify: Forces and Motion Assessment

6th - 8th Grade

14 Qs

quiz-placeholder

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Amplify: Forces and Motion Assessment

Amplify: Forces and Motion Assessment

Assessment

Quiz

Science

6th - 8th Grade

Practice Problem

Medium

NGSS
MS-PS2-2, MS-PS2-1, MS-PS2-4

Standards-aligned

Created by

Vickram Singh

Used 835+ times

FREE Resource

About this resource

This assessment covers forces and motion concepts at a middle school level, specifically designed for grades 6-8. The quiz focuses on Newton's laws of motion, particularly the relationship between force, mass, and acceleration as described by Newton's second law (F = ma). Students must analyze scenarios involving collisions, friction, and changes in motion to determine which objects experience the strongest forces. The core concepts students need include understanding that force equals mass times acceleration, recognizing that forces occur in pairs during interactions (Newton's third law), and identifying friction as the force that opposes motion and causes moving objects to stop. Students must apply quantitative reasoning to compare forces by considering both the mass of objects and their change in speed, while avoiding common misconceptions such as "objects run out of force" or "heavier objects always experience stronger forces." Created by Vickram Singh, a Science teacher in the US who teaches grades 6 and 8. This assessment serves as a comprehensive evaluation tool for a forces and motion unit, effectively measuring student understanding of fundamental physics concepts through real-world scenarios. Teachers can deploy this quiz as a summative assessment following instruction on Newton's laws, or use individual questions for formative assessment during lessons to identify misconceptions and guide instruction. The varied contexts—from playground activities to sports scenarios—make the content accessible and engaging while maintaining scientific rigor. This assessment aligns with NGSS standards 5-PS2-1 (forces and motion interactions), MS-PS2-1 (forces and motion in collisions), and MS-PS2-2 (force interactions), providing teachers with valuable data on student mastery of these essential physical science concepts that form the foundation for advanced physics study.

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14 questions

Show all answers

1.

MULTIPLE CHOICE QUESTION

5 mins • 1 pt

Media Image

Three toy boats with the same mass were in a lake. Two boats were moving and one was stopped. Each boat got bumped by another boat, but not in the same direction. All the boats changed speed as a result of being bumped. Use the information in the diagram to answer.


Which toy boat(s) experienced the strongest force when it was bumped? How do you know?

The blue toy boat experienced the strongest force because it takes a stronger force to slow something down than it takes to speed something up.The , blue toy boat, experienced the strongest force because it takes a stronger force to slow something down than it takes to speed something up.

The gray toy boat experienced the strongest force because it had the fastest ending speed.

The orange and gray toy boats experienced the strongest forces because they both gained the same force as they sped up. The blue boat lost force, so it slowed down.

All three toy boats experienced the same strength force because they changed speed by the same amount.

Tags

NGSS.MS-PS2-1

NGSS.MS-PS2-2

2.

MULTIPLE CHOICE QUESTION

5 mins • 1 pt

Media Image

Three chairs were rolling across a flat office floor. The blue and red chairs are the same mass, and they have more mass than the yellow chair. Each chair was hit by another chair, but not from the same direction. Use the information in the diagram to answer.


Which chair(s) experienced the strongest force when hit? How do you know?

The blue and red chairs experienced the strongest force because they are both more massive than the yellow chair and they changed speed by the same amount.

The red chair experienced the strongest force because it is as massive as the blue chair and has the highest ending speed.

All three chairs experienced the same force because they changed speed by the same amount.

The blue chair experienced the strongest force because it takes more force to slow an object than it takes to make it go faster.

Tags

NGSS.MS-PS2-1

NGSS.MS-PS2-2

3.

MULTIPLE CHOICE QUESTION

5 mins • 1 pt

Media Image

Scott and James work at a grocery store. After the grocery store closed, they were playing a game with a shopping cart and Scott’s skateboard. They crashed the skateboard and the shopping cart two times. The shopping cart had more mass in Crash 2 than it did in Crash 1. Use the information in the diagram to answer.


In which crash did the skateboard experience a stronger force? Why?

The skateboard did not experience a force; only the shopping cart experienced a force in the crashes.

Crash 2; the force on the cart was stronger in this crash, so the force on the skateboard was also stronger.

The diagram doesn’t tell you anything about the force on the skateboard. It only gives information about the force on the shopping cart.

The skateboard experienced the same force in both crashes. The shopping cart changed speed by the same amount in each crash, so the force on the skateboard was the same each time.

Tags

NGSS.MS-PS2-1

4.

MULTIPLE CHOICE QUESTION

3 mins • 1 pt

Sandra pushed a wooden block and it slid across the floor. The wooden block gradually slowed down and stopped after moving 10 meters.


Why did the block stop moving?

The floor exerted a force that is opposite to the direction of the block’s motion.

The block ran out of force.

The floor absorbs force from the block.

All objects stop moving because their natural state is to be still.

Tags

NGSS.MS-PS2-2

5.

MULTIPLE CHOICE QUESTION

5 mins • 1 pt

Media Image

Miniature golf is a game in which players hit a golf ball with a club, which causes the ball to roll along the flat ground. Three golf balls with the same mass were rolling on the ground. Each ball was hit by a golf club, but not from the same direction. All the golf balls changed speed as a result of being hit. Use the information in the diagram to answer.


Which golf ball(s) experienced the strongest force when hit? How do you know?

The white and purple golf balls because they gained force, while the green golf ball lost force.

The green golf ball because it takes a stronger force to slow something down than to speed something up.

The green golf ball because it changed speed the most.

The white golf ball because it has the fastest ending speed.

Tags

NGSS.MS-PS2-1

NGSS.MS-PS2-2

6.

MULTIPLE CHOICE QUESTION

5 mins • 1 pt

Media Image

Hockey is a sport in which players use hockey sticks to push a puck across smooth ice. At practice one day, three different-colored hockey pucks were sliding on the ice. The green hockey puck has less mass than the black and purple hockey pucks, which have the same mass. A player hit each hockey puck with a stick, but not from the same direction. Use the information in the diagram to answer.


Which puck(s) experienced the strongest force when hit? How do you know?

All three hockey pucks experienced the same force because they changed speed by the same amount.

The black hockey puck; it is more massive and has the fastest ending speed.

The purple hockey puck; it takes a stronger force to slow down a more massive object than to speed it up.

The black and purple hockey pucks; they have more mass than the green puck, but changed speed by the same amount.

Tags

NGSS.MS-PS2-1

NGSS.MS-PS2-2

7.

MULTIPLE CHOICE QUESTION

5 mins • 1 pt

Media Image

Mateo and Jackie were on a playground rolling some different-sized balls to get them to crash. They used a tennis ball (the same mass) in both crashes. They tried two soccer balls—a pink one (more mass) for Crash 1 and a blue one (less mass) for Crash 2.


Mateo and Jackie want to know what happened to the tennis ball. Use information from the diagram to answer.


In which crash did the tennis ball experience a stronger force? How do you know?

Crash 1; the force on the soccer ball was stronger in this crash, so the force on the tennis ball was also stronger.

There was no force on the tennis ball. In each crash only the soccer ball experienced a force.

It was the same in both crashes. The soccer ball changed speed by the same amount in each crash, so the force on the tennis ball was the same both times.

The diagram doesn’t tell you anything about the force on the tennis ball. It only gives information about the force on the soccer balls.

Tags

NGSS.MS-PS2-1

NGSS.MS-PS2-2

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