Physical Society Colloquium
Taking a scientific approach to physics education
Physics and Education Stanford University
Guided by experimental tests of theory and practice, science has advanced
rapidly in the past 500 years. Guided primarily by tradition and dogma, science
education has remained largely medieval. Recent research on how people learn,
combined with careful experiments in university physics classrooms, is now
revealing much more effective ways to teach and evaluate learning than is
currently used in most science classes. I will discuss these results and what
they tell us about principles of learning and their effective implementation
in physics courses and research advising. This research is setting the stage
for a new approach to teaching that can provide the relevant and effective
science education for all students that is needed for the 21st century. It
also reveals that traditional attitudes about learning and the introductory
physics curriculum can be inadvertently sustaining systemic discrimination.
Note: The live presentation of this colloquium will be available via zoom
only. A recording will be available following the talk at
https://www.youtube.com/c/McGillPhysicsVideos/
Presentation slides.
Friday, January 14th 2022, 15:30
Tele-colloquium
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