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Main Authors: Hruška, Martin, Plesch, Martin
Format: Preprint
Published: 2025
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Online Access:https://arxiv.org/abs/2512.07513
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author Hruška, Martin
Plesch, Martin
author_facet Hruška, Martin
Plesch, Martin
contents One of key goals of contemporary physics (and, realistically, STEM) education is to develop students' science literacy and critical thinking skills. In this paper, we present the construction and use of several versions of a simple school-based digital weather station that students can use to measure fundamental physical quantities (temperature, pressure, air humidity, light intensity) as part of school activities. The weather stations were constructed at our workplace using an Arduino microcontroller, BBC micro: bit, and the school measurement system Coach. This paper proposes not only the design and related programming of the weather stations but also how students can collect, analyse, and interpret measured data, thereby learning scientific methods and developing science literacy and critical thinking. This hands-on approach also develops students' experimental skills, emphasizes the cross-curricular relationships between physics, computer science and geography, and teaches them to work with accurate data in the context of real environmental problems.
format Preprint
id arxiv_https___arxiv_org_abs_2512_07513
institution arXiv
publishDate 2025
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle The use of a simple digital weather station (not only) in teaching physics
Hruška, Martin
Plesch, Martin
Physics Education
One of key goals of contemporary physics (and, realistically, STEM) education is to develop students' science literacy and critical thinking skills. In this paper, we present the construction and use of several versions of a simple school-based digital weather station that students can use to measure fundamental physical quantities (temperature, pressure, air humidity, light intensity) as part of school activities. The weather stations were constructed at our workplace using an Arduino microcontroller, BBC micro: bit, and the school measurement system Coach. This paper proposes not only the design and related programming of the weather stations but also how students can collect, analyse, and interpret measured data, thereby learning scientific methods and developing science literacy and critical thinking. This hands-on approach also develops students' experimental skills, emphasizes the cross-curricular relationships between physics, computer science and geography, and teaches them to work with accurate data in the context of real environmental problems.
title The use of a simple digital weather station (not only) in teaching physics
topic Physics Education
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2512.07513