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What students, faculty, and recent graduates say about Physics at Principia.

"I've been
able to dedicate myself to projects in other classes and see them all
the way to completion because I've been trained to do that in physics."
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Mind-boggling, practical, funand a raw challenge
"After you've done a physics major," remarks a junior, "nothing
seems impossible anymore." A senior finds the physics major "fun
because of the raw challenge, the demand for precision, completeness, and
excellence." Another junior physics major who also has minors in math and
computer science says, "We touch on a lot of really mind-boggling
topicslike black holesbut we also get to find out why everyday
things work." A senior with a studio art minor points out that "it
takes a real commitment to the subject to be able to do well. I've been able
to dedicate myself to projects in other classes and see them all the way through
to completion because I've been trained to do that in physics."
Faculty mentors encourage individual study
"The professors here make you think on your own," says a junior,
"and not just plug in numbers to come up with an answer. There's also a
push toward individual research." Another junior physics major with minors
in math and earth science says he enjoys his physics classes because of the
individual attention from professors "who are really into what they're
teaching and ready to help you at any time." A senior who has a special
interest in the history of science and cultural development issues discovered,
"It's like learning a foreign language, a language which describes reality.
In order to perform physics effectively, you have to learn the vocabulary and
grammar, just plug away until you get it."
Professional networking puts students where the action is
One student had been concerned that he might not be learning all he should at
Principia. However, after spending part of Principia's 6-week winter break
working on projects at Cal Tech, he said, "I found out what is actually
going on in the work place, and what I've been learning at Principia is
definitely applicable." He has since arranged a summer internship with
a planetary scientist at Cal Tech and will be working on a camera studying
Mars. Another student worked with a specialist in musical acoustics at Northern
Illinois University the summer before his senior year. In addition, the
professors are actively involved in professional associations and have
connections with researchers at institutions like NASA and the Jet Propulsion
Laboratory (JPL). Through this network, Principia science students have set
up internships with leading scientists on projects such as the Search for
Extraterrestrial Intelligence (SETI) or the Hubble Space Telescope.
The power of observation
"Everyone always wonders and ponders why things work and how things work,
and I have that knowledge now," says a junior physics major. "There's
incredible creativity in physics," says a professor, "but that
creativity always has to be confronted with the facts as you know or observe
them. The ultimate benefit from this process is the development of rigorous
mathematical thinking and the power of observation, but physics students also
tend to have really good success in graduate school and at work. They're in
demand, too, in places you might not expectlike investment banking on
Wall Street." A professor notes, "In politics, law, and in the home,
we need people who understand science. We need politicians better equipped to
help the government make environmentally sound judgments about pollution,
automobiles, electric vehicles, proper use of the atmosphere, and especially
people who understand nuclear technology well enough to help guide our country
through the vast morass of nuclear regulations. We need people in business who
understand the laws of exponential growth, who won't be fooled by a business
ethic which says we have to have a certain amount of growth every year."
Flexibility and opportunity
"The physics major at Principia is flexible, as well as challenging,"
says a senior who is also a history major. "That allows us to do other
activities. Among my friends who are physics majors, one is captain of the
rugby team, another takes major roles in the theatre productions, and another
is president of her house. All these activities let us integrate what we've
learned as physics majors into the rest of life. We get to reflect on what
we're learning." A recent graduate has similar thoughts when it comes
to his current situation. "My liberal arts background is helpful on my
job, because although I'm a programmer with highly technical work to do, I
also travel to represent JPL in meetings with high-ranking military people
and other customers of the software that we produce. Being able to write, to
give a presentation, and to work in a group are extremely important both to
my usefulness to my employer and to my advancement. Recently I was sent to
Germany to work on a project, which was pretty exciting." This alumnus
has now begun a master's program in the engineering department of the
University of Southern California.
Springboard to the world
"I was thrilled to get into such a prestigious school, straight out of
Principia," says an alumnus who is now in a Ph.D. program at Cal Tech.
"I worked at the Jet Propulsion Laboratory here during three vacations,
and it was Principia faculty contacts that helped me find those jobs. I got to
do hands-on research as an undergrad, real science with real scientists, and
that was good. An alum who has a research assistantship at the University of
Illinois at Champaign-Urbana caught up quickly in technical knowledge that some
other grad students brought with them from technical schools. "Because I
had experience programming and working with Mathematica at Principia, I use
those skills as a daily part of my research work and in classes." Another
recent grad reports, "The Principia physics, math, and computer science
faculty, as teachers, have a much higher commitment level than many teachers
I've met at more technically oriented institutions. They understand how to have
a class teach itself. They teach students to be better learners. What you gain
from them educationally is very valuable later on."
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