I received my BSEE in 1966 and it was never called SI, or the International 
System of Units.  However, I learned "metric" as at least a somewhat coherent 
system in high school chemistry and physics, and as MKSA 
(meter/kilogram/second/ampere) in college where its coherence was emphasized.  
The work of Giorgi in incorporating electical units into mks was specifically 
discussed, and our physics courses weren't to use cgs units.  That was new 
direction and the textbook for our fifth term of physics had not been 
re-written 
to comply -- very confusing.

A few minor details changed but the differences between MKSA approved by the 
CIPM in 1946 and the formal approval of the SI in 1960 are really negligible.  
Certainly the kelvin, the mole, and the candela (candle back then) were all 
well 
known and used before incorporation into the SI.




________________________________
From: Paul Trusten <[email protected]>
To: U.S. Metric Association <[email protected]>
Sent: Sat, February 16, 2013 1:32:05 PM
Subject: [USMA:52364] Re: milliliters exclusively instead of teaspoons

Great question, Martin. I'll have to find out. I got my pharmacist license 
during the Bicentennial, so much may have changed. I would he interested to 
know 
if is taught as a system approach. I would hope that it is in-depth if it is 
taught as part of a pre-professional curriculum, since it would have to be 
adopted for use there by younger students who would then branch off into 
different healthcare disciplines (medicine, dentistry, pharmacy, nursing, 
medical laboratory science, radiology, respiratory therapy) and should indeed 
know SI in depth before entering their professional curricula.

I can tell you this: I was never taught SI.  No teacher--and I have a BA in 
biology as well as a BS in Pharmacy-- ever stood in front of me and uttered 
even 
the words "International System of Units," much less deliver a few lectures on 
the subject. What we learned about SI was gleaned by rote, and without an 
appreciation that they were part of a coherent whole.

I'll start by asking my alma mater.


PaulPaul R. Trusten
Registered Pharmacist
Vice President and Public Relations Director
U.S. Metric Association, Inc.
www.metric.org
[email protected]
+1(432)528-7724




----- Original Message ----- From: <[email protected]>
To: "U.S. Metric Association" <[email protected]>
Sent: 2013-02-16 11:05
Subject: [USMA:52363] Re: milliliters exclusively instead of teaspoons


> Paul Trusten-- I'm curious:  what kind of training in measurement do 
>pharmacists get these days?  Is it just the minimum to do the job, or do they 
>get in-depth training for an understanding of measurement systems, including 
>not 
>only basic metric units, but also SI.  I notice that the Merck Manual is using 
>more SI units, e.g., to replace millimetres of mercury and decilitres of blood 
>components.  --Martin Morrison
> 
> 
> 

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