论文标题
关于圣何塞州立大学物理和天文学学生阅读协会(PHASR)的反思
Reflections on the Physics and Astronomy Student Reading Society (PhASRS) at San Jose State University
论文作者
论文摘要
COVID-19大流行对我们对本科物理教育的看法进行了深刻的变化。在线课程成为主流。考试格式被重新构想。数字白板取代了面对面的讨论。实验室课程配备了家用供应套件。我们所有人都对希腊字母和符号(Delta,Omicron等)的知识比我们舒适的承认更加亲密。从本科生(S.L.J.)和课堂讲师(A.H.和C.L.S.)的角度来看这些转变之后,我们发现在网上环境中复制的亲自学习经验的最具挑战性的方面是关系。为了强调一些可以缓解这些问题的方式,我们在这里报告了圣何塞州立大学(SJSU)物理学和天文学学生阅读协会(PHASRS)的活动,该学会是我们自己的SJSU的一个在线阅读小组,由我们自己和其他人从2020年夏天到2020年秋季末运行。描述了阅读小组的结构和指导原则的要素,以及学生和教师对什么效果以及没有什么作用的元素。手稿强调了天文学和物理学主题俱乐部作为学习的工具,并且更普遍地强调了社区建设计划在该学科中的重要性。我们的希望是,这一活动摘要将激发大学的教职员工和学生,也许高中可以想象开发科学人社区的新可能性,而科学的人们可能无法存在。
The COVID-19 pandemic imposed profound changes on the way we think about undergraduate physics education. Online courses became mainstream. Exam formats were reimagined. Digital whiteboards replaced face-to-face discussions. Laboratory classes were outfitted with home-delivered supply kits. And all of us developed a more intimate knowledge of Greek letters and symbols (delta, omicron, etc.) than we might have comfortably liked to admit. Having weathered these transformations from the point of view of both an undergraduate student (S.L.J.) and classroom instructors (A.H. and C.L.S.), we have found that among the most challenging aspects of the in-person learning experience to replicate in an online environment have been the relational ones. To highlight some of the ways in which these issues can be mitigated, we report here on the activities of the San Jose State University (SJSU) Physics and Astronomy Student Reading Society (PhASRS), which was an online reading group at SJSU founded by ourselves and others running from the summer of 2020 until the end of the fall 2020 semester. Elements of the reading group's structure and guiding principles are described, as well as student and faculty reflections on what worked well and what did not. The manuscript underlines the power of astronomy- and physics-themed journal clubs as vehicles for learning and more generally emphasizes the importance of community-building initiatives in the discipline. Our hope is that this summary of activities will inspire faculty members and students at colleges and perhaps high schools to imagine new possibilities for developing communities of people in science that might not otherwise be able to exist.