Please Note: Change of speaker from the earlier published program.

STS Circle at Harvard
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David Meshoulam
University of Wisconsin, Madison,

on
Science Education Across Mass Ave: PSSC and the History of (Harvard) Project 
Physics, 1961-1970

Monday, March 3
12:15-2:00 pm
Room 100F, Pierce Hall, 29 Oxford Street

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Lunch is provided if you RSVP.
Please RSVP to 
sts<mailto:[email protected]>@hks.harvard.edu<mailto:[email protected]> 
by 5pm Today, Wednesday, February 26.

Abstract: In the decades following WWII, the high-school science classroom 
served as a site for scientists to buttress their epistemic and political 
authority. Curricula from the 1950s, as exemplified by MIT professor Jerrold 
Zacharias's PSSC course, presented science through the lens of experimentation. 
Yet from the start educators decried Zacharias's monolithic approach. In 1961 
Harvard professor Gerald Holton and student James Rutherford began to develop 
an alternative Science-Humanities curriculum based on Harvard's Nat. Sci. 
courses. They argued that historical context would attract and engage students 
and reconfigure how the public came to understand the relationship between 
science and culture. By 1963, with implicit blessing from the NSF, their 
project grew into Harvard Project Physics (HPP). Yet many considered HPP 
orthogonal to the goals of the foundation and denied it funding. A new 
political landscape in the mid 1960s, however, shifted the relationship between 
the NSF and Office of Education, providing space for HPP.

Biography:  David Meshoulam recently completed his PhD in the Department of 
Curriculum & Instruction at the University of Wisconsin-Madison. His work 
examines the history of science education, specifically the incorporation of 
history of science in science pedagogy. His doctoral work traces the history of 
Harvard Project Physics, a curriculum developed during the 1960s. He also holds 
a Master's degree in the History of Science from UW-Madison; his thesis 
examined the incorporation of biographies in early 20th-century science 
textbooks. His interests lie in how scientists and educators present  the idea 
of "science" to students and how students come to understand scientific 
knowledge, the use of evidence, and ideas of expertise. His work has been 
published in the Journal of Research in Science Teaching and The Role of Public 
Policy in K-12 Science Education. David currently teaches physics at Newton 
North High School in Newton, MA.




A complete list of STS Circle at Harvard events can be found on our website:
http://www.hks.harvard.edu/sts/events/sts_circle/
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