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            Physics Professor Puts Student Learning Under the Microscope 
            
            August 12, 2004 :: No. 21 
            
               
                
                     
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                      | Michael Loverude | 
                     
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             Michael E. Loverude, assistant professor 
              of physics at California State University, Fullerton, soon will 
              be trying to get into college students’ heads — to find 
              out if they understand what they are taught about science. 
             Loverude has received $46,194 in first-year funding 
              from the National Science Foundation to study student learning in 
              introductory physics labs — courses taken by students in several 
              science degree programs. The three-year project will provide data 
              on what concepts students have trouble understanding for the purpose 
              of charting new paths to comprehension.  
             “We will be performing assessments of student 
              learning through interviews and tests,” says Loverude. “We 
              will see if existing materials need to be adapted or if new materials 
              need to be created, in order to deal with special topics and subjects 
              that students consistently have difficulty in understanding.” 
             Partners in the study with Loverude are physics colleagues 
              on the faculties of Arizona and New Mexico state universities who 
              also received NSF funding for the project. They also have collaborators 
              at Chicago State University, Seattle Pacific University and Grand 
              Valley State University in Michigan. 
             Loverude joined Cal State Fullerton in 1999 after 
              completing his doctorate at the University of Washington. The Long 
              Beach resident currently teaches courses on “Physics for the 
              Non-Science Major,” “Physical Science for Future Elementary 
              Teachers” and “Fundamental Physics.” His articles 
              about student understanding have been published in the American 
              Journal of Physics and the Proceedings of the Physics Education 
              Research Conference. 
            
             
             
             
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