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The IPS Authors
The authors of Introductory Physical Science
(IPS) are an experienced
team, each of whose members brings important contributions from physics,
chemistry, and science education to the development and implementation
process.
Uri Haber-Schaim is the project director and
senior author of both Introductory Physical Science and Force,
Motion, and Energy. Additionally, he is also a co-author
of PSSC Physics and Physical Science
II (Energy: A sequel to IPS), among others. Dr. Haber-Schaim
is a recipient of the Oersted Medal (1970), the highest award of the
American Association of Physics Teachers, for notable contributions to
the teaching of physics . He served on the faculties of the University
of Illinois, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, the Weizmann Institute
of Science, and Boston University. His research work was in theoretical
particle physics. Dr. Haber-Schaim received an M.Sc. from Hebrew University
in Jerusalem and earned his Ph.D. in physics from the University of Chicago,
under the supervision of Enrico Fermi.
Reed
Cutting* is a retired secondary-school science
teacher. He taught in the Nantucket (MA) and Marblehead (MA) public school
systems for 38 years. He was an early pilot teacher for IPS and
continued teaching the course and its sequel, Energy, for 30
years in Marblehead. He was active in IPS teacher-training
for more than 35 years, including eight summers as an instructor at SCI's
national workshops at the Colorado School of Mines. He became a member
of the writing team in 1993. For two summers, Mr. Cutting was responsible
for bringing IPS to teachers in Caracas, Venezuela
(under the auspices of USAID.) He was a Fulbright exchange teacher at
Lord Williams’s School in Thame, Oxfordshire, England. Mr. Cutting
holds a B.A. from Wesleyan University and an M.A. from Colgate University.
Peter Gendel** has taught science for 21 years and
currently teaches IPS at Isidore Newman School
in New Orleans (LA). He was a pilot teacher for FM&E and
has served as an instructor at SCI’s national workshops at the
Colorado School of Mines and at regional workshops in Massachusetts.
He was a Fulbright post-doctoral research scholar to Belgium and Luxembourg.
Dr. Gendel holds a B.A. from Tulane University and an M.A. and Ph.D.
from the University of Wisconsin-Madison.
H. Graden Kirksey is
a professor emeritus of chemistry, former department chairman, and
recipient of the University of Memphis’s
Distinguished Teaching Award. Dr. Kirksey’s other publications
include manuals for undergraduate instruction and articles in refereed
journals. He has been involved with IPS since
1970 and continues to teach SCI’s national in-service workshops.
Dr. Kirksey received his Ph.D. in physical chemistry from Auburn University. Harold Pratt led
the science education efforts for the Jefferson County Public Schools — the largest school district
in Colorado, with an enrollment of more than 80,000 — for over
28 years and was part of the original IPS development
team. Mr. Pratt directed one of the first IPS pilot
centers and has supported the implementation of the course since that
time. In addition to his role with IPS and FM&E,
Mr. Pratt was the project advisor for the text Middle School
Life Science and co-author of Local Leadership for
Science Education Reform. From 1992 to 1995, he was a member
of the National Science Education Standards development team, and from
1995 to 1999, he was a director in the Center for Science, Mathematics,
and Engineering Education at the National Research Council. Mr. Pratt
holds a B.A. from Phillips University and an M.A.T. from Brown University.
He was the 2001-2002 President of the National Science Teachers Association.
* IPS 7th Ed. only
** IPS 8th
Ed. only
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