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PhysTEC addressing physics teacher shortage

10.10.08 | American Physical Society

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The Physics Teacher Education Coalition (PhysTEC) is breaking new ground in an effort to increase the numbers of physics teachers in US schools. PhysTEC supplies funds for cutting-edge recruitment and education of science teachers from among the population of physics students at participating college and universities. The program is an important step toward fulfilling the need for physics teachers as states shore up their K-12 science curricula and increasing numbers of colleges and universities demand that incoming freshmen have more science courses listed in their high school transcripts.

A recent nationwide effort to increase the technological literacy of our workforce and a trend toward emphasizing science education are among the factors that have led to an increase in the fraction of students taking high school physics of about 1% a year. Unfortunately, the US is suffering from a woeful shortage of qualified physics teachers; only a third of the nation's 23,000 physics teachers have a degree in physics. PhysTEC is designed to help US students remain competitive in an ever more technological world.

Eight years ago, the American Physical Society (APS), the American Association of Physics Teachers (AAPT), and the American Institute of Physics (AIP) jointly launched PhysTEC to help U.S. universities prepare more highly qualified physics teachers and alleviate the nation's critical physics teacher shortages. Some of the successes that PhysTEC institutions have achieved include

PhysTEC began with six universities and has expanded to a total of 14 sites, which are chosen through a peer-reviewed solicitation that considers the applicant's potential to increase the number of teachers who graduate and develop programs that serve as national models. Evidence of collaboration between physics and education faculty is another important criterion.

In response to a recent request for proposals, the project received 45 proposals for four available slots. "The physics community is clearly showing broad interest in teacher preparation," said Ted Hodapp, director of education and diversity for APS. "If there were funding for 10 times as many institutions to replicate PhysTEC's efforts, major progress could be made toward putting highly qualified teachers in every one of our country's physics classroom. With today's highly competitive technical workplace, the need for physics teachers has never been greater."

PhysTEC is funded by the National Science Foundation (NSF) and APS.

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Contact Information

James Riordon
American Physical Society
riordon@aps.org

How to Cite This Article

APA:
American Physical Society. (2008, October 10). PhysTEC addressing physics teacher shortage. Brightsurf News. https://www.brightsurf.com/news/LVWMZRX8/phystec-addressing-physics-teacher-shortage.html
MLA:
"PhysTEC addressing physics teacher shortage." Brightsurf News, Oct. 10 2008, https://www.brightsurf.com/news/LVWMZRX8/phystec-addressing-physics-teacher-shortage.html.