16
        
        
          Awards
        
        
          
            The Klopsteg Memorial Lecture Award
          
        
        
          is named for Paul E. Klopsteg, a principal founder, a former AAPT Presi-
        
        
          dent, and a long-time member of AAPT, and recognizes outstanding communication of the excitement of contem-
        
        
          porary physics to the general public. The recipient delivers the Klopsteg Lecture at an AAPT Summer Meeting on a
        
        
          topic of current significance and at a level suitable for a non-specialist audience and receives a monetary award, an
        
        
          Award Certificate, and travel expenses to the meeting.
        
        
          
            Eugenia Etkina
          
        
        
          Rutgers University
        
        
          Professor of Physics
        
        
          New Brunswick, NJ
        
        
          The
        
        
          
            Robert A. Millikan Medal
          
        
        
          for 2014 is presented to
        
        
          
            Eugenia Etkina
          
        
        
          for her notable and creative contributions
        
        
          to the teaching of physics. Etkina started her teaching career as a high school physics teacher in Moscow, Russia,
        
        
          where she taught for 13 years before coming to the U.S. In 1995-1997 she taught physics courses for at-risk students at
        
        
          Rutgers University. In 1997 she received her PhD in physics education from Moscow State Pedagogical University and
        
        
          was appointed an assistant professor at the Rutgers University Graduate School of Education. She became an associ-
        
        
          ate professor in 2003 and a full professor in 2010 and served as the chair of the Department of Learning and Teaching
        
        
          from 2011 to 2014.
        
        
          Since 2003 she has been running one of the largest programs in physics teacher preparation in the United States.
        
        
          Professional learning community of the program graduates now has over 60 physics teachers. Her pivotal role in
        
        
          sustaining and expanding this community is evidenced by the moniker that her New Jersey physics teachers use for
        
        
          themselves. Etkina is involved in reforms in undergraduate physics courses and in the professional development
        
        
          programs for in-service middle school science and high school physics teachers. She is a co-creator of the Investigative
        
        
          Science Learning environment (ISLE)—an approach to teaching and learning physics that helps students learn physics
        
        
          by engaging in activities that mirror the practice of physics. She is also a co-author of a newly published ISLE-based
        
        
          textbook College Physics and a companion Active Learning Guide. Together with her colleagues and students (now
        
        
          in-service teachers) she developed the Physics Union Mathematics (PUM) curriculum that is used in middle and high
        
        
          schools to help students learn physics through ISLE. An AAPT member since 1997, Etkina has 32 years of experience
        
        
          in physics and astronomy instruction at middle school, high school, and university levels.  She has served AAPT on
        
        
          the Focus Group on the Draft Framework and on the 2013 AAPT Sponsored Discussion Group Response to Achieve
        
        
          on the Next Generation Science Standards Second Draft.
        
        
          In addition to the AAPT Distinguished Service Citation that she received in 2012, Etkina has been recognized with the
        
        
          2012 New Jersey Distinguished Faculty Showcase of Exemplary Practices Award, 2011 Rutgers University Graduate
        
        
          School of Education Alumni Association Outstanding Faculty Teaching Award, 2010 Rutgers University Warren I Sus-
        
        
          man Award for Excellent Teaching, and the 2007 Rutgers University Graduate School of Education Alumni Associa-
        
        
          tion Outstanding Faculty Research Award.
        
        
          The Robert A Millikan Medal, established in 1962, recognizes teachers who have made notable and creative
        
        
          contributions to the teaching of physics. The recipient is asked to make a presentation at the Ceremonial Session
        
        
          of an AAPT Summer Meeting. A monetary award, The Millikan Medal, an Award Certificate, and travel expenses to
        
        
          the meeting are presented to the recipient.
        
        
          Robert A. Millikan Medal
        
        
          
            Students of Physics:
          
        
        
          
            Listeners, Observers,
          
        
        
          
            or Collaborative
          
        
        
          
            Participants?
          
        
        
          
            Wednesday, July 30
          
        
        
          
            10:30–11:30 a.m.
          
        
        
          
            Northrop Auditorium
          
        
        
          Klopsteg Memorial Lecture Award
        
        
          The
        
        
          
            Klopsteg Memorial Lecture Award
          
        
        
          for 2014 is presented to
        
        
          
            Donald W. Olson,
          
        
        
          PhD, Professor of Physics at Texas
        
        
          State University, in recognition of his outstanding communication of the excitement of contemporary physics to the
        
        
          general public.
        
        
          Don Olson is nationally known for his ability to apply physics to solve mysteries in art, history, and literature - and to
        
        
          communicate the results to the public in a coherent, exciting way. His work has been published in more than thirty ar-
        
        
          ticles in
        
        
          Sky & Telescope
        
        
          magazine and has been featured in the
        
        
          Smithsonian Magazine
        
        
          ,
        
        
          Scientific American,
        
        
          and a host
        
        
          of major newspapers. Olson’s recent book,
        
        
          Celestial Sleuth
        
        
          (Springer, 2014), collects his research in chapters devoted
        
        
          to night sky paintings by Vincent van Gogh, Edward Munch, Claude Monet, and J. M. W. Turner, moonrise photo-
        
        
          graphs by Ansel Adams, events from military history ranging from the Battle of Marathon to moonlight and tides
        
        
          during World War II, and references to celestial phenomena by Chaucer, Shakespeare, Mary Shelley, Walt Whitman,
        
        
          and James Joyce.
        
        
          Olson earned his BS in physics from Michigan State University, receiving upon graduation the Thomas H. Osgood
        
        
          Undergraduate Physics Award—an award named after the professor who was an early editor of the
        
        
          American Journal
        
        
          of Physics
        
        
          and the inspirational teacher in the first physics courses that Olson took at MSU. After earning his PhD in
        
        
          physics from the University of California-Berkeley, Olson studied galaxies and cosmology for four years at Cornell
        
        
          University and two years at the University of Texas at Austin, and he then began teaching at Texas State University in
        
        
          1981. He has received many teaching awards during his career, including the 2011 Presidential Award for Excellence
        
        
          in Teaching, Texas State’s top teaching award.
        
        
          Olson has been a valuable participant at Texas Section AAPT/APS meetings for many years. He has twice given
        
        
          plenary talks on the use of astronomy and physics to solve mysteries in historical events and in topics from art and
        
        
          literature.
        
        
          Regarding his selection as 2014 Klopsteg Award recipient, Olson said, “I am deeply honored to receive this recogni-
        
        
          tion, especially because the award commemorates Paul Klopsteg, who dedicated so much of his life to physics educa-
        
        
          tion.”
        
        
          
            DonaldW. Olson
          
        
        
          Texas State University
        
        
          Professor of Physics
        
        
          San Marcos, TX
        
        
          
            Celestial Sleuth: Using
          
        
        
          
            Physics and Astronomy
          
        
        
          
            to Solve Mysteries in Art,
          
        
        
          
            History, and Literature
          
        
        
          
            Tuesday, July 29
          
        
        
          
            10:30–11:30 a.m.
          
        
        
          
            Northrop Auditorium