Ebenezer Fitch Professor of Astronomy, Williams College


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 FROM AAPT

PSSC Birthday Remembrance by Carl Berger
 

 

Teaching PSSC Physics: A Remembrance of Things Past by Chris Chiaverina
 

PSSC: Hearing the Music by Leon Cooper
 

PSSC PHYSICS: By One Who Saw It from Beginning to End by John H. Dodge
 

Discovering the PSSC: A Personal Memoir by A. P. French
 

Reminiscences: PSSC Experiences Remembered by Edwin L. Goldwasser
 

A Summer with PSSC by Tom Greenslade
 

PSSC PHYSICS: A Personal Perspective by Uri Haber-Schaim
 

How PSSC Shaped My Teaching by Dick Heckathorn
 

PSSC Reflections by Jim Hicks
 

Personal Views of the Beginnings of PSSC and My Film Experiences by John G. King
 

Happy Birthday PSSC by Karen Kwitter
 

PSSC:  Instant Credibility for a Beginning High School Physics Teacher by John W. Layman
 

From New Brunswick to Tirupati with PSSC by Peter Lindenfeld
 

PSSC: a Student Perspective by Jane Bray Nelson
 

PSSC and me by Jim Nelson
 

 

PSSC in Historical Context: Science, National Security, and American Culture during the Cold War by John L. Rudolph
 

Twenty Seven Years with PSSC by McLaurin Smith-Williams
 

Thoughts on My Experiences with PSSC Physics by Robert Stair
 

An Ode to PSSC by Arnold A. Strassenberg
 

When PSSC Came to Long Island by Cliff Swartz
 

 

 

Happy Birthday PSSC

by Karen Kwitter

I took PSSC physics in my junior year of high school, 1966-67 and it was a transforming experience. PSSC was experimental then; of the three or four physics sections at my school only one got to use this new curriculum. We were told we were in a new kind of physics class where students would learn about interesting topics and do new kinds of experiments. While my friends in the other sections were measuring boiling points and specific heats (and complaining about how boring their physics class was), we were using carbon paper and a ticker to measure the progress of a falling ball, playing with the ripple tank and making slits for Young’s experiment with razor blades. That captured our interest!

Learning about mechanics and Newton’s Laws through the problems in the text and our experiments was so much fun, even the “non-science-oriented” students were into it. But the ripple tank was by far the most fun and most memorable component of that whole year. It was such a novel device to us; we loved using it and got really good at predicting and analyzing the interference patterns. Learning about light through these experiments was the most fascinating thing I had ever been exposed to. I had wondered about the explanation of oil-slick rainbows for years, and had even asked my teacher about it at the beginning of the term – he promised we would get to it, and when we did, I felt a visceral sense of satisfaction to finally understand. I fell in love with physics during that class, and it may be that this early introduction to measuring and understanding light is what spurred me to become an astronomer (one who does spectroscopy!).

The excitement of that class 40 years ago was no doubt due in part to our charismatic teacher and to the general high academic level of the students, but it is clear that a great deal of the success of that class was due to the PSSC curriculum and the way it introduced us at the same time to the mystery and the comprehensibility of the physical world. For that I will always be grateful.