학술논문

Today's Interdisciplinary Quantum Information Classroom: Themes from a Survey of Quantum Information Science Instructors
Document Type
Journal Articles
Reports - Research
Author
Meyer, Josephine C. (ORCID 0000-0002-3595-1880); Passante, Gina (ORCID 0000-0002-3718-3387); Pollock, Steven J. (ORCID 0000-0002-2462-8164); Wilcox, Bethany R.
Source
Physical Review Physics Education Research. Jan-Jun 2022 18(1).
Subject
Quantum Mechanics
Information Science
Interdisciplinary Approach
Introductory Courses
College Instruction
College Students
Teacher Background
Student Characteristics
Difficulty Level
Mathematical Concepts
Algebra
Textbooks
Instructional Materials
Academic Standards
Prerequisites
Required Courses
Curriculum Development
Mathematics Skills
Educational Quality
Language
English
ISSN
2469-9896
Abstract
Interdisciplinary introduction to quantum information science (QIS) courses are proliferating at universities across the US, but the experiences of instructors in these courses have remained largely unexplored in the discipline-based education research (DBER) communities. Here, we address this gap by reporting on the findings of a survey of instructors teaching introduction to QIS courses at institutions across the U.S., primarily at the undergraduate or hybrid undergraduate and graduate level, as well as follow-up focus interviews with six individual instructors. Key themes from this analysis include challenges and opportunities associated with the diversity of instructor and student backgrounds, student difficulties with the mathematical formalism (especially though not exclusively with linear algebra), and the need for better textbooks and curricular materials. We also find that while course topics are ostensibly similar, each course is crafted by its instructor to tell a different story about QIS and to uniquely balance goals such as accessibility and academic rigor, such that no canonical introduction to QIS course emerges from our dataset. We discuss the implications of this finding with regard to the benefits and risks associated with standardization of curricula as QIS coursework matures.