Institute of Advanced Studies

Nobel Laureate Carl Wieman


Science Education in the 21st Century: using the methods of science to teach science

Carl WiemanDate: Monday, 7 December 2009

Time: 6pm

Location: University Club Theatre Auditorium, UWA

The nearest car park is P3 off Hackett Entrance 1

Cost: Free. No RSVP required.

Enquiries: Institute of Advanced Studies on 6488 1340 or ias@uwa.edu.au .

Guided by experimental tests of theory and practice, science has advanced rapidly in the past 500 years. Guided primarily by tradition and dogma, science education meanwhile has remained largely medieval.

Research on how people learn is now revealing how many teachers badly misinterpret what students are thinking and learning from traditional science classes and exams. However, research is also providing insights on how to do much better. The combination of this research with modern information technology is setting the stage for a new approach that can provide the relevant and effective science education for all students that is needed for the 21st century.

In this lecture Professor Wieman will discuss the failures of traditional educational practices, even as used by “very good” teachers, and the successes of some new practices and technology that characterize this more effective approach, and how these results are highly consistent with findings from cognitive science.

About Dr Wieman 

Carl Wieman is Director of the Carl Wieman Science Education Initiative. He retains a 20% appointment at the University of Colorado, Boulder to head the science education initiative he founded. These collaborative initiatives are aimed at achieving departmental-wide sustainable improvement in undergraduate science education. He has carried out research in a variety of areas of atomic physics and laser spectroscopy. His research has been recognized with numerous awards including the Nobel Prize in Physics in 2001 for the first creation of and early experiments on Bose-Einstein condensation.

Dr Wieman is a member of the National Academy of Sciences and chairs the Academy Board on Science Education. He is also a member of the US National Academy of Education.

Special thanks to the Embassy of the United States of America for funding support and to U.S. Consulate General of Perth, Ken Cherne, for support for this visit.