Planetary scientist honored for his cosmic perspective
A 彩民宝典 planetary scientist is this year鈥檚 recipient of the Richard H. Emmons award for 鈥榚xtraordinary teaching鈥
For Nick Schneider, teaching isn鈥檛 just something that he has to do鈥攊t鈥檚 his passion. And one that鈥檚 being recognized by the Astronomical Society of the Pacific (ASP) with this year鈥檚 Richard H. Emmons award.
This award, which recognizes extraordinary teaching in astronomy, is the only such award given at the national level, and Schneider is the first recipient to focus on planetary science, rather than astrophysics, since the award鈥檚 inception in 2006.
鈥淭his (award) epitomizes what the University of Colorado gives faculty as a challenge and an opportunity: go do the best you can in research and share it with the world and go do the best you can in teaching and share it with the students,鈥 said Schneider, a professor in the Department of Astrophysical and Planetary Sciences and in the Laboratory for Atmospheric and Space Physics (LASP).
And Schneider has done that in spades, winning awards for both his research and teaching, with the Richard H. Emmons Award being his most recent.
The annual Richard H. Emmons Award recognizes outstanding teaching for non-science majors in college-level introductory astronomy courses. Schneider is this year鈥檚 recipient for his commitment to teaching, his innovative teaching methods, and for being a co-author on The Cosmic Perspective, a highly regarded textbook that, while now a staple in many introductory astronomy classrooms, was initially partially inspired by Schneider鈥檚 own teaching experience.
The story began when Schneider arrived on campus 30 years ago.
He was preparing to teach his very first astronomy class and picked up the textbook for the course. What he found, though, was a dated approach鈥攁 so-called 鈥渕arch of the planets鈥 akin to something found in a child鈥檚 elementary school classroom鈥攊n which students learn planetary science by learning the planets and random facts about them.
This bothered Schneider, who felt that this method didn鈥檛 teach students what they wanted to know: how the planets work. He decided to create his own, more modern, approach that, not only taught the planets, but also how they fit into everything else in the cosmos鈥攁 鈥渃osmic perspective.鈥
This new teaching tactic not only focused on the material students learned, but also how they learned it. Gone are the days in the Duane Physics and Astrophysics Building where introductory astronomy students sit passively, listening to the 鈥渟age on the stage.鈥 Now, students are expected to participate in these interactive lectures through clicker questions and learning assistants that float around the classroom, assisting in discussions and encouraging student engagement in the subject matter.
鈥淚f education were just a matter of listening to the best lecture then we鈥檇 all be replaced with Carl Sagan or Neil deGrasse Tyson in video, but that鈥檚 not the way it works,鈥 commented Schneider. 鈥淭he best education happens in an interactive environment where your understanding is challenged and tested and you鈥檙e encouraged to try it out, even in the large classrooms. That鈥檚 where the learning really takes place.鈥
And that dedication to learning and improving how astronomy is taught has also helped others, which is something Schneider would like to continue doing.
鈥淗is selfless dedication to undergraduate education has also helped me鈥攁nd I suspect many other colleagues鈥攖o become a better teacher,鈥 one unnamed nominator told the ASP.
In addition to his teaching, Schneider is also a distinguished planetary scientist, working on projects like NASA鈥檚 MAVEN mission to Mars and the European Space Agency plan to visit and explore the Jupiter system.
Rather than being two separate things, Schneider says these accomplishments complement and enrich each other.
鈥淚t鈥檚 really exciting for me to bring a discovery that I or my team have made in the course of our research right into the classroom, and there are oftentimes when students in my class know things before the rest of the scientific community does. Students know that it鈥檚 something special too, and it only happens at a space-faring university like the University of Colorado.鈥
Schneider鈥檚 accomplishment will be recognized at the annual ASP Awards Gala on Nov. 9, 2019, in the San Francisco Bay Area.