我们应该如何教授晶体学?教学书籍内容页综述

IF 2 2区 化学 Q2 CRYSTALLOGRAPHY
J. Helliwell
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引用次数: 0

摘要

这篇短文反思了我们如何教授晶体学课程,以及它与所谓的课程书的具体联系。实习中的本科生对老师提出了不同的挑战,这取决于他们是物理学家、化学家还是生物学家;这些是我在过去40年左右教过的特定课程,因此我有丰富的经验。研究生课程由我们的晶体学学会和协会组织。这类课程可能是针对特定学科量身定制的,就像本科生一样,或者更有可能是针对广泛的跨学科学生。我也教过和/或组织过这些。在第三类中,作为研究人员,我们越来越多地被要求向公众和/或在校儿童等广泛受众解释我们的研究,而这些社会阶层不一定受过多少科学训练,或者如果他们受过科学训练,就会被遗忘很久。作为教育工作者,我相信我们所有人都在努力选择在课程中教授晶体学概念的顺序。这一切都与我们作为一个社区如何正式定义“水晶”直接相关。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
How should we teach crystallography? A review of teaching books’ contents pages
This short article reflects on how we teach a crystallography course and which is specifically linked to what is called the course book. An audience of undergraduates in practice presents different challenges to the teacher depending on whether they are physicists, chemists or biologists; these being the specific courses I have taught in the last 40 years or so and for which I, therefore, have extensive experience. Graduate courses are organized by our crystallographic societies and associations. Such courses might be tailored to a given subject, as with undergraduates, or more likely might be for a broad, across the subjects, set of students. I have also taught on and/or organized these. In a third category, as researchers, we are increasingly called upon to explain our research to broad audiences such as of the public, and/or of school children, and these cross sections of society do not necessarily have much science training, or if they have it is long forgotten. As educators, I am sure all of us wrestle with choosing the sequence that we teach our crystallography concepts in our courses. This all connects directly to how we as a community formally define ‘a crystal’.
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来源期刊
Crystallography Reviews
Crystallography Reviews CRYSTALLOGRAPHY-
CiteScore
3.70
自引率
0.00%
发文量
16
审稿时长
>12 weeks
期刊介绍: Crystallography Reviews publishes English language reviews on topics in crystallography and crystal growth, covering all theoretical and applied aspects of biological, chemical, industrial, mineralogical and physical crystallography. The intended readership is the crystallographic community at large, as well as scientists working in related fields of interest. It is hoped that the articles will be accessible to all these, and not just specialists in each topic. Full reviews are typically 20 to 80 journal pages long with hundreds of references and the journal also welcomes shorter topical, book, historical, evaluation, biographical, data and key issues reviews.
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