Views from students and professors in a nonmajor introductory physics course: What is interdisciplinarity?

We present an investigation into the interdisciplinary role of physics in a physics-for-nonphysicists course at Pomona College. This work is guided by prior research into introductory physics for life science (IPLS) courses, but attends to significant differences in the scope and context of this cou...

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Main Authors: Ian Descamps, Thomas Moore, Benjamin Pollard
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: American Physical Society 2020-09-01
Series:Physical Review Physics Education Research
Online Access:http://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevPhysEducRes.16.020118
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spelling doaj-e5d6fbde0dc347d39315660a60f9e9b22020-11-25T03:51:44ZengAmerican Physical SocietyPhysical Review Physics Education Research2469-98962020-09-0116202011810.1103/PhysRevPhysEducRes.16.020118Views from students and professors in a nonmajor introductory physics course: What is interdisciplinarity?Ian DescampsThomas MooreBenjamin PollardWe present an investigation into the interdisciplinary role of physics in a physics-for-nonphysicists course at Pomona College. This work is guided by prior research into introductory physics for life science (IPLS) courses, but attends to significant differences in the scope and context of this course. We interviewed enrolled students, physics professors, and professors from nonphysics disciplines to explore the function of this course and the role of physics in the education of nonphysics science students. Interviews were audio recorded and transcribed, then analyzed to identify emergent themes. These themes outline the authentic physics, including content knowledge and other, broader learning objectives, that play an important and distinct role in the science education of enrolled students. Stakeholders generally align in their emphasis of interdisciplinary relevance with some divergence in the specific articulation of that idea. The differences can be understood through the stakeholders’ distinct areas of expertise, with nonphysics professors expressing value through relevance to their discipline and physics professors focusing on essential aspects of physics.http://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevPhysEducRes.16.020118
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Ian Descamps
Thomas Moore
Benjamin Pollard
spellingShingle Ian Descamps
Thomas Moore
Benjamin Pollard
Views from students and professors in a nonmajor introductory physics course: What is interdisciplinarity?
Physical Review Physics Education Research
author_facet Ian Descamps
Thomas Moore
Benjamin Pollard
author_sort Ian Descamps
title Views from students and professors in a nonmajor introductory physics course: What is interdisciplinarity?
title_short Views from students and professors in a nonmajor introductory physics course: What is interdisciplinarity?
title_full Views from students and professors in a nonmajor introductory physics course: What is interdisciplinarity?
title_fullStr Views from students and professors in a nonmajor introductory physics course: What is interdisciplinarity?
title_full_unstemmed Views from students and professors in a nonmajor introductory physics course: What is interdisciplinarity?
title_sort views from students and professors in a nonmajor introductory physics course: what is interdisciplinarity?
publisher American Physical Society
series Physical Review Physics Education Research
issn 2469-9896
publishDate 2020-09-01
description We present an investigation into the interdisciplinary role of physics in a physics-for-nonphysicists course at Pomona College. This work is guided by prior research into introductory physics for life science (IPLS) courses, but attends to significant differences in the scope and context of this course. We interviewed enrolled students, physics professors, and professors from nonphysics disciplines to explore the function of this course and the role of physics in the education of nonphysics science students. Interviews were audio recorded and transcribed, then analyzed to identify emergent themes. These themes outline the authentic physics, including content knowledge and other, broader learning objectives, that play an important and distinct role in the science education of enrolled students. Stakeholders generally align in their emphasis of interdisciplinary relevance with some divergence in the specific articulation of that idea. The differences can be understood through the stakeholders’ distinct areas of expertise, with nonphysics professors expressing value through relevance to their discipline and physics professors focusing on essential aspects of physics.
url http://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevPhysEducRes.16.020118
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