Affiliation:
1. Kenyon College, Gambier, OH
Abstract
In the 1930s, the teaching staff of the University of Chicago devised a clever way to deliver experimental data to their introductory students without meeting them in the laboratory. The university’s curriculum included a required Introductory Course in the Physical Sciences. There were probably too many students to allow for a standard face-to-face laboratory experience. In this article, I will discuss the solution that was reached about 80 years ago, and muse on how it can be used during a time when a pandemic makes regular laboratory instruction impossible. Their approach may be useful to present-day teachers trying to deliver a laboratory experience to students in introductory physics courses without face-to-face instruction.
Publisher
American Association of Physics Teachers (AAPT)
Subject
General Physics and Astronomy,Education
Reference3 articles.
1. Harvey Brace
Lemon and Michael
Ference
Jr. Analytical Experimental
Physics (University of Chicago
Press, Chicago,
1943).
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