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Creative thinking in university physics education /

Newton, Douglas P., - Personal Name; Institute of Physics (Great Britain), - Personal Name; Nolan, Sam J., - Personal Name; Rees, Simon - Personal Name;

"Version: 20221201"--Title page verso.Includes bibliographical references.1. Creative thinking in physics -- 1.1. The relevance of creative thinking -- 1.2. Physics : cold comfort farm or possibility place? -- 1.3. Creative students? -- 1.4. Creative thinking doesn't come with a guarantee -- 1.5. Variety, the spice of physics teaching -- 1.6. Does it matter? -- 1.7. Something to reflect on2. The creative learner in physics -- 2.1. Learning physics and learning what counts in physics -- 2.2. Noticing and making sense of problems -- 2.3. Constructing understandings to enable explanation -- 2.4. Testing a tentative explanation or idea -- 2.5. Application -- 2.6. Creative thinking is not a mechanical process -- 2.7. Something to reflect on3. Creative thinking in practice : problems -- 3.1. Fertile problems -- 3.2. Curiosity and questions -- 3.3. Noticing, finding, and posing problems -- 3.4. The problem of eliciting students' questions -- 3.5. Fostering students' thinking about problems -- 3.6. The tutor's contributions -- 3.7. There is no end to questions -- 3.8. Something to reflect on4. Creative thinking in practice : ideas -- 4.1. Introduction -- 4.2. Astronomer Copernicus -- 4.3. Divergent thinking -- 4.4. Convergent thinking -- 4.5. Associative thinking -- 4.6. Effective ideas generation -- 4.7. Lateral thinking -- 4.8. Sticky creativity -- 4.9. Conclusion -- 4.10. Something to reflect on5. Creative thinking in practice : experiments -- 5.1. Introduction -- 5.2. The affective domain -- 5.3. Gender equity -- 5.4. Experimental demonstrations -- 5.5. Objects as analogies and metaphors -- 5.6. Thought experiments -- 5.7. Inquiry based learning -- 5.8. Something to reflect on6. Creative thinking in practice : applications -- 6.1. Introduction -- 6.2. Frameworks for creativity in learning -- 6.3. Designing a creative learning activity -- 6.4. Case studies -- 6.5. Discussion -- 6.6. Conclusions -- 6.7. Something to reflect on7. Recognising creative thinking in physics -- 7.1. Uncertainty and assessing thinking competences -- 7.2. Assessing the product of creative thought -- 7.3. Assessing the process of creative thought -- 7.4. Working in groups on practical and other tasks -- 7.5. Risk taking and some caveats -- 7.6. Providing feedback -- 7.7. Recognition and measurement -- 7.8. Something to reflect on8. The creative tutor -- 8.1. The value of creative teaching -- 8.2. Ten questions and answers -- 8.3. Why teach creatively? -- 8.4. Creative teaching to support students' learning -- 8.5. Creative uses of technology -- 8.6. The place of critical/evaluative thinking -- 8.7. Change and challenges -- 8.8. Some things to reflect on9. Creative approaches to teaching physics in the twenty-first century -- 9.1. Laboratory learning -- 9.2. Simulation based learning -- 9.3. The use of virtual and augmented reality in physics teaching -- 9.4. Enhancing peer learning in lectures with technology -- 9.5. Judging support tools -- 9.6. The future -- 9.7. Something to reflect on10. Creating change -- 10.1. Taking the wider view -- 10.2. Some roles -- 10.3. Some hurdles -- 10.4. Health, safety, and risk assessment -- 10.5. Physics as a dynamic discipline -- 10.6. Creative physics and the cultivated imagination.For physics researchers, creative thinking is used daily to solve challenges at the forefront of what is known about the Universe. In this book, the authors introduce concepts and ideas around creative thinking and provide practical advice and guidance for those who teach physics in universities to help them embed opportunities for creativity in their teaching and in their students' learning.All teachers/tutors of physics in higher education. The themes and examples apply to all physics courses.Also available in print.Mode of access: World Wide Web.System requirements: Adobe Acrobat Reader, EPUB reader, or Kindle reader.Professor Douglas Newton specialises in science education at Durham University. He has authored or co-authored many papers and some 50 books, and has several active research projects on creativity in the sciences.Title from PDF title page (viewed on January 9, 2023).


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Detail Information
Series Title
-
Call Number
-
Publisher
: .,
Collation
1 online resource (various pagings) :illustrations (some color).
Language
English
ISBN/ISSN
9780750340281
Classification
530.0711
Content Type
-
Media Type
-
Carrier Type
-
Edition
-
Subject(s)
Physics
Creative ability in science.
Teaching skills & techniques.
EDUCATION / Teaching / Subjects / Science & Techno
Specific Detail Info
-
Statement of Responsibility
Douglas P. Newton, Sam Nolan and Simon Rees.
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