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In the bustling physics lab of Oakwood High, three students—Mia, Jordan, and Priya—stared at the clock. The Annual Senior Physics Challenge was two weeks away. They had the talent, the curiosity, and a stack of past papers fresh off the printer. But they also had a problem: fear.
Mia took a deep breath. She remembered Dr. Evans’ three columns. She wrote down what she knew. She drew the diagram. She took the first small step. senior physics challenge past papers
“Don’t time yourselves,” he said. “Don’t even worry about getting the right answer. Just write down anything you know. Draw the rocket. Write down momentum conservation. Even if you only get the first line—‘Let the exhaust mass be Δm’—that counts.” In the bustling physics lab of Oakwood High,
Jordan noticed something else. “Look at this—the first two marks are just for defining symbols and drawing a diagram. I skipped those. But they’re free points.” But they also had a problem: fear