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PHYSICS
LESSONS
Amy Perlman '05 Wins a Knowles Teaching Fellowship
When graduating Haverford senior Amy
Perlman, a physics major, stepped on stage at the Los Angeles Convention
Center before 6,500 experts last March, she admitted to "feeling
a little nervous." Not too many undergrads speak before the
august American Physical Society, and Dr. Phaedon Avouris, Columbia
University adjunct chemistry professor was in the house to hear
her presentation, "Electrical Breakdown of Carbon Nanotubes
in Ultrahigh Vacuum": "Well, he's the God of carbon nanotubes,
that's all," Amy recalls. "What he says goes, and he'd
just grilled the guy before me ..."
But Avouris didn't grill Amy. "He asked some
questions, along with the others, but they were in the spirit of
being helpful." Like: "Did you try baking the sample?"
— a necessary step in experiments aimed at relaxing the carbon
nanotubes on the way to "breaking" them — Perlman's
research, under Professor Walter Smith, her thesis and research
adviser, was in ways to make carbon nanotubes, already more efficient
than copper wire as conductors of electronic impulses, even more
so. The idea is to study the "breaks" more minutely, enabling
researchers to learn more about how fundamental connections work...
(Nanotubes are extremely thin, hollow cylinders 10,000 times smaller
than a human hair. They can be used in nano-electronic devices,
such as computers.)
"It was one of the great things about being at
a place like Haverford," Amy says."I got to do research
[and do the APS talk], opportunities that might have gone to graduate
students [at a larger school]. "What was remarkable about being
here was the warmth and spirit of cooperation" — of collegial
attitudes to problem-solving and [moving forward in science]. "We
often gathered in the beautiful lounge — we're a relatively
small department — and just worked on stuff one of us was
doing."
"Amy's right that the research opportunities
available to undergraduates at Haverford are unusual, though they're
far from unique," Professor Smith clarifies. "Haverford
was a pioneer institution in performing cutting-edge research with
undergrads...[but] at this point there are many places that do this
well...Haverford still emphasizes it more strongly...[Also] it's
not uncommon for Haverford students to give talks at national meetings...several
of our students [counting all the sciences] do this each year,"
but it's true that only about one physics student does so a year.
"One thing that is unusual about Amy is the degree
to which she took advantage of the opportunities available...In
addition to her research work, she has been tutoring in a South
Philadelphia school for a few years...I think it's the combination
of her dedication to teaching, as shown by her consistent efforts
in tutoring underprivileged students; the breadth of her coursework
in physics, math, and education; and her research, which together
made her a strong candidate for the Knowles."
Perlman has been tutoring other students since her
days at George Mason High School in Falls Church, Virginia, so her
orientation has always been toward teaching: "It sounds kind
of cheesy to say this, but some people don't want to be teachers
— something you do for others...But I loved my high school
physics class. It was part of the real world, empowering...like
I saw that you could be walking down the street, watching the motion
of cars passing, and you could explain big things by just observing
the everyday things around you...So I see myself teaching in places
where you can seed that..."
She's not yet sure whether she'll be a full-time student
in a graduate program this fall, or will be teaching part-time in
a high school near her home. The dispersal of monies from the Knowles
will depend on which course of action she takes. The fellowship
provides $10,000 a year for two years for tuition assistance in
a certification or master's program; a $1,000-a-month stipend if
she chooses to be a full-time student; and professional development
activities, mentoring, and classroom grants. The classroom support
is renewable up to five years.
"One thing about teaching in high schools, too,
is that you can encourage females to go into fields like physics,"
Amy emphasizes. "I wasn't encouraged — I was just stubborn.
And I was the only female physics major [in my class] at Haverford."
Learn more about the Knowles Teaching Fellowships
here.
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