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Educating tomorrow’s space weather researchers and professionals. W. Jeffrey Hughes Center for Integrated Space Weather Modeling Boston University. Background.
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Educating tomorrow’s space weather researchers and professionals W. Jeffrey Hughes Center for Integrated Space Weather Modeling Boston University
Background • Space Physics education is almost exclusively at the graduate level, very few undergraduates get any exposure. (There are a handful but growing number of undergraduate courses being offered.) • Graduate programs have concentrated on educating the next generation of research specialists – often very specialized – not generalists. • Only about a dozen universities have space physics programs, and almost none of these have faculty expertise in all components of the sun-earth system (sun, solar wind, magnetosphere, upper atmosphere).
Issues and Problems • How do you make research students to think about the broad context of their specialized research problem? • How do you convince students immersed in an academic environment of the practical aspects of what they study? • Where can non-researchers get a broad technical introduction to space weather?
One solution: The CISM Summer School • Two weeks in the summer – long enough to absorb concepts and form relationships, short enough to be able to afford the time. • Introductory graduate level – give the students a broad picture early. • Emphasize concepts rather than math and theory – broad audience. • Introduce modern pedagogy to graduate education.
The Format • Morning lectures: one each on • The space environment – Reality • Space weather effects – Harsh reality • Modeling the space environment – Virtual reality • Afternoon Lab Exercises: use visualizations of model runs to understand the mornings lessons. • Schedule: Day 1: Introduction Days 2 & 3: The Sun Days 4 & 5: The Solar Wind Days 6 & 7: The Magnetosphere Days 8 & 9: Ionosphere and thermosphere Day 10: Capstone Project
The Outcomes • Eleventh Summer School this July. • Many “young professionals” apply and form 25-30% of the “students” • Air Force, SWPC, industry, airlines, etc. • 52 applications for 32 seats this year. • Over 300 alumnae • Very positive ratings