NEXUS/Physics: An interdisciplinary repurposing of physics for biologists
E. F. Redish, C. Bauer, K. L. Carleton, T. J. Cooke, M. Cooper, C. H., Crouch, B. W. Dreyfus, B. Geller, J. Giannini, J. Svoboda Gouvea, M. W., Klymkowsky, W. Losert, K. Moore, J. Presson, V. Sawtelle, K. V. Thompson, C., Turpen, and R. K. P. Zia

TL;DR
NEXUS/Physics is an interdisciplinary physics curriculum designed for life science students, integrating biology and chemistry concepts to enhance scientific competencies and reform undergraduate science education.
Contribution
It introduces a novel, interdisciplinary physics curriculum tailored for biology students, linking physics with biological and chemical concepts to improve scientific understanding.
Findings
Curriculum aligns with biology and chemistry courses
Includes interdisciplinary examples like energy, thermodynamics, diffusion
Supports improved scientific competencies in students
Abstract
In response to increasing calls for the reform of the undergraduate science curriculum for life science majors and pre-medical students (Bio2010, Scientific Foundations for Future Physicians, Vision & Change), an interdisciplinary team has created NEXUS/Physics: a repurposing of an introductory physics curriculum for the life sciences. The curriculum interacts strongly and supportively with introductory biology and chemistry courses taken by life sciences students, with the goal of helping students build general, multi-discipline scientific competencies. In order to do this, our two-semester NEXUS/Physics course sequence is positioned as a second year course so students will have had some exposure to basic concepts in biology and chemistry. NEXUS/Physics stresses interdisciplinary examples and the content differs markedly from traditional introductory physics to facilitate this. It…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
