CARL WIEMAN
'Carl Edwin Wieman' (born March 26 1951) is a Nobel-prize winning American physicist at the University of British Columbia who (with Eric Allin Cornell), in 1995, produced the first true Bose-Einstein condensate. Wieman joined the University of British Columbia on January 1st, 2007 and is heading a well-endowed science education initiative there; he retains a 20% appointment at University of Colorado, Boulder to head the science education project he founded in Colorado.[1]
In a ''Time magazine'' article (April 10, 2000), Wieman was quoted, "We get to within a billionth of a degree of absolute zero."
Wieman was born in Corvallis, Oregon and graduated from Corvallis High School. Wieman earned his B.S. in 1973 from MIT and his PhD. from Stanford University in 1977; he was also given a honorary Doctorate of Science from the University of Chicago in 1997. He was awarded the Lorentz Medal in 1998. In 2001, he won the Nobel Prize in Physics, along with Cornell and Wolfgang Ketterle. In 2004, he was named United States Professor of the Year among all doctoral and research universities.
In the last several years, Wieman has been particularly involved with efforts at improving science education and has conducted educational research on science instruction. Wieman currently serves as Chair of the Board on Science Education of the National Academy of Sciences. He has used and promotes Eric Mazur's pedagogical system called "peer instruction", where teachers repeatedly ask multiple-choice concept questions during class, and students reply on the spot with little wireless "clicker" devices. If a large proportion of the class chooses a wrong answer, students discuss among themselves and reply again.[2] In 2007, Wieman was awarded the Oersted Medal, which recognizes notable contributions to the teaching of physics, by the American Association of Physics Teachers (AAPT).
| Contents |
| References |
| External links |
| Selected publications |
References
1. CU-Boulder News Release, 20 March 2006
2. Trading Research for Teaching, Inside Higher Ed, 7 April 2006
External links
★ 2001 Nobel Physics Winners
★ Nobel Autobiography
★ Globe and Mail Article
★ Carl E. Wieman Patents
Selected publications
★ Dynamics of Collapsing and Exploding Bose−Einstein Condensates, , Elizabeth A., Donley, Nature,
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