Dear All,
ICTP is pleased to announce that the forthcoming ICTP
Colloquium, "What Research on Learning Tells Us About Teaching
Physics", by
Prof. Helen Quinn, SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory,
Stanford University, will take place next week, Today 22
November at 16:30 hrs, in the Budinich Lecture Hall,
Leonardo Building, ICTP.
BIOSKETCH: Helen Quinn, originally from Australia, is Professor
Emerita of Particle Physics and Astrophysics at SLAC National
Accelerator Laboratory. She received her Ph.D in physics at
Stanford in 1967. She has taught physics at both Harvard and
Stanford and is an internationally recognized theoretical
physicist who holds the ICTP Dirac Medal, the Klein Medal (from
The Swedish National Academy of Sciences and Stockholm
University) as well as the Sakurai Prize (from the American
Physical Society) and the Compton medal (from the American
Institute of Physics, awarded once every 4 years). She is a
member of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, the
National Academy of Science and the American Philosophical
Society. She is a Fellow and former president of the American
Physical Society. Dr. Quinn has been active in science education
for some years. She served as Chair of the US National Academy
of Science Board on Science Education (BOSE) from 2009-2014 and
as a member of the BOSE study that developed the report “Taking
Science to School” as well as chairing the committee for the
“Framework for K-12 Science Education”, which is the basis of
the Next Generation Science Standards (NGSS) that have now been
adopted by multiple states in the US. In 2015 Helen was
appointed by the President of Ecuador as a member of the initial
“Comision Gestora” to help guide the development of the National
University of Education of Ecuador.
ABSTRACT: Almost all physicists are also physics teachers during
their career. We all learned, so we think we know how to teach.
But teaching as you were taught is unlikely to be the best
approach. Repeated experiments at many Universities and with
many students, have demonstrated what works and what does not.
Dr. Quinn will summarize the work of physics education research,
and talk about how to become a more effective teacher by paying
attention to what this research has shown.
The abstract of the talk is available at http://indico.ictp.it/event/8244/
The Colloquium will be livestreamed at ictp.it/livestream
The poster is attached.
Light refreshments will be served after the lecture.
You are all very warmly invited to attend.
Office of the Director, ICTP