C Curriculum Explorer
Science·Forces & Motion·conceptual

Newton's First & Second Laws

State and apply Newton's First Law (an object stays at rest or constant velocity unless acted on by a resultant force) and Second Law (force = mass × acceleration), including the relationship between mass, force, and acceleration

Suggested ages 12–13

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Evidence of understanding

  • States Newton's First Law and gives a real example (e.g. why a moving spacecraft doesn't need engines in space)
  • Uses F = ma to calculate force, mass, or acceleration given the other two quantities
  • Explains why a heavier object requires more force to achieve the same acceleration
  • Explains why seatbelts are needed in cars using Newton's First Law

Assessment prompt

If Newton's First & Second Laws was asked why you need a seatbelt in a car but not when sitting still, could they explain what Newton's First Law says about moving objects — and then calculate how much force a 60 kg person experiences in a sudden stop?

Standards alignment

MS-PS2-1US · ngss-ms

MS-PS2-1

Next Generation Science Standards (NGSS) Middle School

MS-PS2-2US · ngss-ms

MS-PS2-2

Next Generation Science Standards (NGSS) Middle School

KS3.Sci.Phys.MotionAndForces.7GB · uk-nc-2013

Newton's Laws of Motion

The national curriculum in England: Key stages 1 and 2 framework document · KS3