Thorne Group Research and Education

Department of Physics

Laboratory of Atomic and Solid State Physics

Cornell UniversityIthaca, NY • 14853

ret6@cornell.edu • (607)255-6487

Teaching and Undergraduate Education

Introductory Course Instruction and Curriculum Reform

I have had a longstanding commitment to undergraduate education, and specifically to the physics education of majors outside of physics including those in the life sciences, engineering and earth and atmospheric sciences. I have led major reforms of Physics 2207, introductory mechanics and heat for life science students, in 1999-2005, and of Physics 2214, oscillations, waves, and quantum physics, in 2008-2010 and 2015-2017, the most recent period as part of the College of Arts and Sciences Active Learning Initiative. These reforms have focused on deliberate practice / active learning and on motivating students by illustrating connections to applications they care about.

Features of Physics 2214 include:

For my contributions to undergraduate education I received the Class of 72 Innovation in Teaching Award, a Faculty Appreciation Award from Cornell's Fraternities and Sororities, and a Faculty Innovation in Teaching Award. In 2011 I was named a Stephen H. Weiss Presidential Fellow, Cornell's highest recognition for teaching and advising.

Cornell's Undergraduate Teaching Assistant Program in Physics

Between 2008 and 2010, with support from the APS PhysTEC project and the Provost's office, Marty Alderman, Jim Overhiser (two regional high school physics teachers) and I established the Physics Department's Undergraduate Teaching Assistant (UTA) Program. I took over the program in 2011 after our external funding ended, and grew it from 20 to roughly 100 student participants per semester and from coverage of two to a dozen physics courses per year, including both introductory and physics major courses, between 2011 and 2018.

The Cornell Physics UTA program one of the largest and most successful Physics peer instruction programs in the U.S., and has been critical in supporting the expansion of active learning/deliberate practice methods in our courses and in expanding the support we provide to traditionally underrepresented and socioeconomically disadvantaged groups, including in our honors courses. The program is now run by Dr. James Baker. I have revamped and am currently teaching Physics 4484, our seminar course on Teaching and Learning Physics, taken by new UTAs and interested graduate students. Topics covered include question types and questioning strategies, facilitating classroom discourse, memory and learning, deliberate practice and expertise acquisition, mental models and conceptual change, psychological aspects of teaching in a diverse classroom, microaggressions, metacognition, multiple intelligences, learning styles, multiple representations, mindsets, creativity, willpower, what makes teachers effective and how to measure it, active learning and course design, and connections between human and machine learning.

International Education

In 2003 Cornell opened a branch of its Weill Cornell Medical School in Doha, Qatar. WCMC-Q is one of the founding programs of Education City, a visionary effort to bring world-class undergraduate and professional education to the Middle East. I have been involved with the premedical program there since 2003, and from 2004-2012 served as Course Director for Physics . The program draws students from the Middle East, Northwest Africa and the Indian subcontinent. I have lectured and given research and teaching seminars in Doha, provided annual program evaluations, and have hosted students from the program in summer research.