Article ID: CBB001500034

The Pedagogical Implications of Maxwellian Electromagnetic Models: A Case Study from Victorian-Era Physics (2014)

unapi

In the late Victorian Era, a group of British physicists devoted their time to interpreting and extending the work of James Clerk Maxwell. There has been considerable discussion about the ways in which these “Maxwellian” physicists used mechanical models by in the for research purposes; less attention has been paid to the relevance of their mechanical models for pedagogical purposes. Drawing from educational research literature, I begin from the premise that understanding a scientist's self-identity in its historical context is crucial to understanding how she or he enacts particular pedagogical approaches. I aim to extend Bruce Hunt's seminal work on the Maxwellians by providing a pedagogical analysis of one of Sir Oliver Lodge's lectures. In so doing, I claim that Lodge drew on his identity as a Maxwellian as an organizing framework for his lecture and that he attempted to engage his audience in Maxwellian thought by exposing them to many mechanical models. I conclude that Lodge's self-concept as a teacher and his apparent broad appeal as a public educationist were deeply embedded in his life history as a member of the Maxwellians. Sir Oliver Lodge's identities as a Maxwellian and a pedagogue are inextricably linked.

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Authors & Contributors
Hunt, Bruce J.
Pelosi, Giuseppe
Stefano Selleri
Francesco Nappo
Marmottini, Donatella
Lazaroff-Puck, Cameron
Journals
Studies in History and Philosophy of Science
Physics in Perspective
Science and Education
Nuncius: Annali di Storia della Scienza
Nineteenth-Century Contexts
European Review
Publishers
Pavia University Press
Prometheus Books
Icon Books
Firenze University Press
New York University
Cambridge University Press
Concepts
Electromagnetism
Physics
Electricity; magnetism
Science education and teaching
Models and modeling in science
Metaphors; analogies
People
Maxwell, James Clerk
Lodge, Oliver
Hertz, Heinrich Rudolph
Faraday, Michael
Helmholtz, Hermann Ludwig Ferdinand von
Fitzgerald, George Francis
Time Periods
19th century
20th century
Places
Great Britain
Scotland
Europe
Tuscany (Italy)
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