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Foothill
College Astronomy Instructor Andrew Fraknoi, M.A., has been named
the 2007 California Professor of the Year by the Carnegie Foundation
for the Advancement of Teaching and the Council for Advancement
& Support of Education (CASE). Fraknoi was selected from more
than 300 top professors in the United States. The 40 national and
state winners of the U.S. Professors of the Year Award will be honored
at a luncheon and evening reception in Washington, D.C. Nov. 15.
The
U.S. Professors of the Year Award Program salutes the most outstanding
undergraduate instructors in the country-those who excel as teachers
and influence the lives and careers of their students. It is recognized
as one of the most prestigious awards honoring undergraduate teaching.
"So
often what happens behind the doors of our nation's college classrooms
is left only to the public's imagination," Fraknoi said. "Yet,
it is behind those doors that the crucial transformation of our
students from kids to adults and from passive to active learners
happens. My life's missions have always been to share the excitement
of astronomy with those who are not particularly science-oriented
and foster in my students a lifelong interest in the wonders of
the universe."
A
distinguished astronomy educator with a national reputation, Fraknoi
is a longtime, community college instructor, textbook author, and
prolific writer and speaker. During his career in education, he
co-founded Astronomy Education Review, an online journal;
founded the Cosmos in the Classroom Symposia for college faculty;
and served as the executive director of the Astronomical Society
of the Pacific (ASP) for 14 years. He has been a member of the Foothill
College faculty and chairman of the college's astronomy department
since 1992.
A resident
of San Francisco, Fraknoi is renowned for his ability to present
and explain some of the most intriguing areas of modern astronomy
and physics for students who are not majoring in the sciences. Students
routinely applaud him for his instructional approach, which emphasizes
humor, analogies, demonstrations, and relating science to the humanities.
He is not above choreographing a quick moon orbit dance for his
students or doing his own pulsar dance to keep their interest.
Fraknoi
was chosen for the prestigious award for his extraordinary dedication
to undergraduate teaching; impact on and involvement with undergraduate
students; scholarly approach to teaching and learning; and contributions
to undergraduate education at Foothill College, in the community.
"I
believe that an understanding of our place in the wider universe
and the methods of science are part of the birthright of everyone
living on our planet," Fraknoi said. "Yet, the way science
is taught in this country can often discourage non-science majors
from taking a life-long interest-or even a course-long interest-in
science. My philosophy is to show students that science is engaging,
human, and part of our cultural heritage.
"In
all my science classes, I am dedicated to help students succeed,
irrespective of their backgrounds, ages, or previous science experience.
I do everything I can to make my classes fun, including using lots
of visuals, reading poems and limericks, recommending science fiction
stories, and even doing a moon-revolution or pulsar-beam dance in
front of the class.
"After
38 years of teaching, I still approach each class with an enthusiasm
for the subject matter that I hope comes across to the students.
I try to communicate science in everyday language, drawing the students
in, instead of pushing them away. My courses stress the larger themes
of the vast scales of space and time, the varieties of nature, and
the intricate beauty of the subatomic world. I am so delighted when
students who have not succeeded in science before tell me that,
for the first time, they really feel like they 'get it' and understand
why people are excited about science."
The
California Professor of the Year Award is the latest of a number
of awards that recognize Fraknoi's commitment to excellence. In
1994, he received the Annenberg Foundation Prize of the American
Astronomical Society-then the highest honor in the field of astronomy
education-as well as the ASP's Klumpke-Roberts Prize, which is awarded
for a lifetime of contributions to popularizing astronomy.
He
was the first recipient of the 2002 Carl Sagan Prize, awarded to
a Bay Area scientist for outstanding work in popularizing science,
and was elected a Fellow of the California Academy of Sciences in
2003 (apparently the first community college instructor ever to
serve in this capacity). His "Physics for Poets: Everything
You Wanted to Know about Einstein but Were Afraid to Ask" course
received the 2005 Innovation of the Year Award from the League for
Innovation in the Community College because it treats some of the
strangest and most abstract ideas of modern physics-relativity,
quantum mechanics, thermodynamics-at the non-science major level,
without math, but with humor, analogies and thought experiments.
It also combines science with the humanities, using novels, poems,
science fiction stories, music and art to illustrate the effect
that modern physics has had on many areas of human culture.
In
addition, Asteroid 4859 has been named Asteroid Fraknoi by the International
Astronomical Union to honor his work in sharing the excitement of
modern astronomy with students, teachers, and the public.
Radio
listeners know him as a frequent guest on local and national news
and talk programs. In Northern California, he appeared for more
than 20 years on the Jim Eason Show on KGO and was a regular
on the Pete Wilson Show on the same station. He has also
been a regular guest on the Forum program with Michael Krasny
on KQED, and is the astronomer-in-residence on the syndicated Mark
& Brian Show based in Los Angeles. Nationally, he has been
heard on Science Friday and Weekend All Things Considered
on National Public Radio. His TV appearances include the Today
Show, CBS Morning News and Larry King Live.
A
prolific author, Fraknoi has edited two collections of science articles
and science fiction stories for Bantam Books, and is the lead author
of Voyages through the Universe (1997-2004, now in its third
edition from Brooks-Cole), which has become one of the leading astronomy
textbooks in the world. He is also the editor of the two-volume
teaching guide The Universe at Your Fingertips, one of the
most widely used astronomy education resources. His children's book
on astronomy, Wonderful World of Space, was published by
Disney in July 2007.
Last
month, he made his symphony debut, narrating Gustav Holst's The
Planets with the California Symphony Orchestra.
Eight
years ago, Fraknoi founded the Silicon Valley Astronomy Lecture
Series, which has grown to be one of the most popular events at
Foothill College in Los Altos Hills. For many of these lectures,
Foothill's 900-seat theater is filled to overflow capacity with
crowds eager to hear current developments in astronomy from world-renowned
scientists. The slate of impressive guest lecturers who have presented
at Foothill College include the first woman in history to discover
a planet, a U.S. astronaut, a winner of the Nobel Prize in physics,
and the discoverer of the dwarf planet beyond Pluto.
At
the ASP, an international scientific and educational organization
founded in 1889, he also founded and directed Project ASTRO, a program
that trains and brings professional and amateur astronomers into
4th-9th grade classrooms (now in 13 regional sites throughout the
U.S.) to help teachers be more effective in covering astronomy and
space science. An offshoot, called Family ASTRO, brings hands-on
astronomy events, kits and games to families around the country.
Fraknoi
serves on the board of trustees of the SETI Institute, a scientific
and educational organization. He is also a Fellow of the Committee
for the Scientific Investigation of Claims of the Paranormal (CSICOP),
specializing in debunking astrology.
Educated
at Harvard and the University of California, Berkeley, he has taught
astronomy and physics at San Francisco State University, City College
of San Francisco, Cañada College, and several campuses of
the University of California Extension Program.
Competition
for the U.S. Professors of the Year Award takes place in several
stages. Each candidate must first be selected from many qualified
peers at his or her own institution and nominated for the award.
Letters of support and endorsements from current and former students,
colleagues, and presidents or academic deans accompany the entries.
CASE then assembles two preliminary panels of judges to select finalists.
The Carnegie Foundation then convened the third and final panel,
which selected four national winners, who will be announced Nov.
15. CASE and Carnegie select state winners from top entries resulting
from the judging process. Fraknoi was selected from faculty members
nominated by colleges and universities throughout California.
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