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You are here: Home Graduate School Graduate Courses Academic Year 2011-2012 Introduction to Physics Education Research (PER)

Introduction to Physics Education Research (PER)


Coordinator: Rajesh B. Khaparde

Credits: 4

Duration: 40 hours; Class starts Monday January 16, 2012 Day/Time: Monday, 3.00 pm - 5.30 pm

 

The course will be based on the Physics Education Research and Developmental work reported during last two decades through major journals and books. The course will begin with an introduction to important aspects related to curriculum development, assessment, classroom and activity based physics education, and a few other issues in teaching a learning of physics at school and university level. During the course, some important and well accepted strategies of instruction (e.g., active learning, guided discovery, problem solving) and evaluation will be discussed. Details of some major projects in physics education (e.g., workshop physics, real time physics, physics by inquiry, ALOP) will also be presented.


Some time will be spent on understanding various R&D efforts, in the field of student’s ideas and alternative conceptions in physics and possible corrective measures. The course will also have presentations on teacher training, development of procedural understanding, experimental problem solving and designing of laboratory courses. The course will have discussions on the work carried out during past two decades at HBCSE.


The course will involve classroom interaction, assignments (based on possible extension of R&D work to other areas in science) and reading sessions on some important publications. The assessment will be based on continuous evaluation, presentations and end semester evaluation test.

 

References:

1) Lillian C. McDermott and Edward F. Redish, Resource Letter: PER-1: Physics Education Research, Am. J. Phys. 67, 755 (1999)

2) R. Gott & S. Duggan 1995. Investigative work in the Science Curriculum. Buckingam: Open University Press.

3) Paula R. L. Heron and David E. Meltzer The future of physics education research: Intellectual challenges and practical concerns, Am. J. Phys. 73, 390 (2005)

4) Rajesh B. Khaparde, H. C. Pradhan, Training in Experimental Physics Through Demonstrations and Problems, First Edition, August 2009, ISBN: 81-87972-34-3, Penram International Publishing (India) Pvt. Ltd., pages 353.

5) Lillian C McDermott, Oersted Medal Lecture 2001: “Physics Education Research—The Key to Student Learning”, Am. J. Phys. 69, 1127 (2001)

6) Ronald K. Thornton and David R. Sokoloff, Assessing student learning of Newton’s laws: The Force and Motion Conceptual Evaluation and the Evaluation of Active Learning Laboratory and Lecture Curricula, Am. J. Phys. 66, 338 (1998)

7) Dean Zollman, Millikan Lecture 1995: Do they just sit there? Reflections on helping students learn physics, Am. J. Phys. 64, 114 (1996)

 


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