Physics textbooks
From ShawnReevesWiki
- Elements of Physics by Alpheus W. Smith.<bibref f="default.bib">Smith
- 1943</bibref>
- at Carpenter Library
- In 1943 preface states purpose "to stress correct scientific thinking rather than to stress the accumulation of facts or to trace the historical development of the subject."
- A Textbook of Physics by Edwin Hall. <bibref>Hall
- A-text-book-of-AA</bibref>
- Electromagnetic Theory by Attay Kovetz
- Intermediate classical (non-quantized) electromagnetic theory presented as a string of mathematical obviousnesses. Preface and contents
- Astronomy textbook promises "choose your own adventure."
- Slater, Slater, & Lyons, 2010. Engaging in Astronomical Inquiry (protected, for internal use only). W. H. Freeman Publishing.
- Six Ideas That Shaped Physics by Thomas A. Moore. http://physics.pomona.edu/sixideas/ Moore has rethought the scope and sequence of introductory physics for college.
Textbooks in use in physics classes
See http://www.aip.org/statistics/texts/hsttext.htm for the results of a US survey of physics teachers in 2005 by the American Institute of Physics. The survey classifies courses as "regular, conceptual, honors, Advanced Placement (AP) B, and AP C." 40% of "regular" physics classes are using Zitzewitz' Glencoe book, the most popular.
Contents of textbooks
See First chapters of physics textbooks for one angle.
Other people who have studied textbooks
- David Kaiser
- MIT, recommended by Suman Seth.
This is his description of a presentation "Zen and the Art of Textbook Publishing" given at a History of Science Society conference (Montreal 2010).
- Textbooks on quantum mechanics -- physicists' description of matter and forces at the atomic scale -- solidified into an identifiable pattern soon after World War II. Unprecedented enrollment pressures in the United States, which saw physics student numbers grow faster than any other field, helped to craft a particular and oft-repeated style in textbooks on quantum theory. Practical calculation trumped more open-ended philosophical engagement or speculation, even for a field like quantum theory that had famously inspired deep philosophical debates. But the student numbers crashed, falling as quickly in the early 1970s as they had risen in the wake of Sputnik. The sudden change in classroom conditions facilitated a speculative or interpretive idiom again. The material that helped to fill that void was often inflected by the growing New Age and counterculture movements, then gathering steam on North American university campuses. I will examine one of these quasi-textbooks closely: Fritjof Capra's _The Tao of Physics_ (1975), which was originally conceived as a textbook, published as a popular book, and picked up by eager physicists across the continent for classroom use.
References
<bibreferences/>