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Setting New Directions in Physics Teaching: PSSC 30 Years Later

SEP 01, 1986
The famous high‐school physics course sought to excite students and prepare them for life in a technological society; three decades after its inception, it has also taught us important lessons about educational innovation.
Anthony P. French

In 1945 the United States emerged from World War II—into a world profoundly altered by scientific growth. Under the pressure of wartime conditions, sophisticated technology—most notably radar—had been developed by exploiting basic physical principles, such as those of electronics and atomic phenomena, and this technology had proved crucial to the war’s outcome. Yet in the postwar US, fewer than 25% of high‐school students were studying physics at all, and what physics was taught emphasized rote learning and superficial description. Similar situations existed in the teaching of mathematics and of other sciences.

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References

  1. 1. PHYSICS TODAY, March 1957, p. 28.

  2. 2. S. White, Contemp. Phys. 2, 39 (1960).https://doi.org/CTPHAF

  3. 3. G. C. Finlay, The School Review 70(1), 63 (1962).
    G. C. Finlay, Am. J. Phys. 28, 286 (1960).https://doi.org/AJPIAS

  4. 4. G. Pallrand, P. Lindenfeld, PHYSICS TODAY, November 1985, p. 46.

  5. 5. J. W. Layman, PHYSICS TODAY, September 1983, p. 26.

  6. 6. J. R. Zacharias, Am. J. Phys. 29, 347 (1961).https://doi.org/AJPIAS

  7. 7. A. B. Arons, PHYSICS TODAY, June 1960, p. 20.

  8. 8. Y. Van Hise, AAPT Announcer 15, 19 (1985).

More about the authors

Anthony P. French, Massachusetts Institute of Technology.

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This Content Appeared In
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Volume 39, Number 9

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