Forum on Education of The American Physical Society
Spring 2006 Newsletter

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Greetings from the Chair!

With spring 2006, we have a new Chair taking over - Peggy McMahan Norris from Lawrence Berkeley Lab will take the lead for the coming year.  The FEd also announced the results from this year's election.  We had a superb slate of candidates, so the FEd can look forward to continued excellent leadership.  My congratulations to the winners, and my thanks to all who stood for election. The FEd depends on committed members to carry forward the education agenda within the APS.  And I also would like to thank those members of the FEd Executive Committee whose terms have expired.  I will serve one more year as Past-Chair, and I will also serve as Chair of the APS Committee on Education (COE) through 2006.

In general, the COE provides education policy input to the APS, with its members appointed by the APS President, while the FEd is the membership unit of the APS, and so takes the leads in sessions and other "operational" education activities, like sessions at meetings.  Of course, there is a lot of overlap between the two bodies, but the close relationship between the FEd and the COE that was institutionalized just a couple of years ago.  Now the Past-Chair, Chair, and Chair-Elect automatically serve on the COE.  What is more, as of this year the Chair of COE serves on the Physics Policy Committee (PPC), which oversees the efforts of the Washington Office.  This arrangement recognizes the need for education issues to be considered when discussing APS efforts to influence policy-makers in Washington.  COE, working with FEd and PPC, introduced a resolution to Council at the April meeting calling for enhanced lobbying on behalf of education.  The resolution approved by Council states that "High-quality education is essential for the progress of science and for the public understanding of its importance.  To help address this need, the American Physical Society, through its Washington Office, will advocate support of appropriately peer-reviewed programs that foster and improve undergraduate and graduate science education or that seek to improve education of K-12 science teachers."  This resolution will support more targeted lobbying on behalf of education, especially discipline-based education research.

Individual FEd members can also play an important role in the education debate.  To get involved, just write your congressional representatives.  Urge them to support education funding, especially in the NSF.  When you go to an APS meeting, look for the booth set up by the Public Affairs office where you can send a template letter to your representatives and urge support for science funding.  If you are visiting Washington, stop by your representative's office and speak up in favor of investment in science and science education.  If you visit the APS website you can find information that you can use (look in Public Affairs), and you can always refer to "Rising above the Gathering Storm" (www.nap.edu/catalog/11463.html), the recently released National Academies of Science report that calls for significant increases in funding for both science and science education.

Another way FEd members can get involved is to help organize sessions at the APS meetings.  If you are interested, email your idea to the program Chair, David Haase (see the FEd webpage for contact info).  We are always looking for people who will do the work to put together good sessions.  At the March and April meetings we had a number of excellent sessions.  From Physics Education Research, to preparing K-12 teachers, to innovations in Graduate Education, FEd put on a range of session topics.  We also shared sessions with the Forum on History in Physics, the Forum on Physics and Society, and the Division of Nuclear Physics, among others.  Another pleasant event that took place at the March meeting was the presentation of the new FEd Fellows during our business meeting.  In general, we intend to alternate the FEd business meeting and reception between the March and April meeting.  We hope that if you are attending you check to see if the FEd reception is at your meeting.  We would love to see you there.

The final thing that I would like to report is that we have reached our goal to endow the Excellence in Physics Education Award.  An endowed award must raise $100,000 in order to be established.  We had a great response from FEd members, the FEd itself matched $30,000 in contributions, and a gift from the Lounsbery Foundation put us over the top.  I hope that many of our members will consider nominating outstanding groups that have made national contribution to physics education at any level for this award.  Wolfgang Christian, who spearheaded the fund-raising effort, will Chair the first award committee.

So with the passing of the gavel we have a new Chair.  I have enjoyed my role in the FEd leadership for the past few years, and I look forward to the coming year as past-Chair (which has the lightest duties!).  I hope that some of you reading this who have never run for office in the FEd will consider doing so, and that you will get as much out of the experience as I have.

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