Where Physics Fits Under Common Core (and Where It Slips)
Last Wednesday, my 10th-grade physics class nailed the trolley lab but froze when I asked them to “cite specific textual evidence” to defend which graph best modeled the motion. That’s the Common Core gap I see most: physics content is fine, but literacy moves lag. Common Core doesn’t prescribe kinematics or circuits; it shapes the math (CCSS.MATH.N-Q, F-IF) and literacy for science/technical subjects (RST.9-10.1, RST.11-12.7, WHST.9-10.2). The fit issues show up when resources are on-topic but ignore those verbs: interpret, justify, use units, structure an explanation.
So I pair content with CCSS-aligned moves. A velocity-time graph task is solid, but I want students to extract slope for acceleration (F-IF), annotate units (N-Q), and summarize findings in a short explanation (WHST). Materials that skip those steps miss the pathway. I’ve found it helps to keep a short alignment checklist taped into my planner—and I keep digital versions filed in the science community library so I can pull them mid-week. ClassPods shows me quickly where a prompt is thin on evidence or vocabulary so I can tighten it before class.