Prof. William Scott's Teaching Pages
Teaching Philosophy
I have to confess that if I were forced to choose between a career
involving only teaching and one involving only scientific research,
I would chose the latter. But I really enjoy teaching eager
students, and I think it is a very important civic responsibility
as a scientist. A properly functioning democratic society requires
that all its citizens be scientifically literate and capable of
thinking critically, and I take the responsibility for helping to
instill these ideas very seriously.
I also think the most important way to teach and learn experimental
sciences is to do it, not to just read about it and take courses.
For that reason, my laboratory is often host to several
undergraduate students as well as Ph.D. students, and we all learn
from each other. The importance of learning by doing in science
cannot be over-estimated. A close corollary is that the most
important aspect of a lecture and textbook based course is not the
lecture or the textbook, but rather learning how to solve problems
with pencil and paper. I am not much for testing memorization. My
courses emphasize learning how to solve unanticipated problems, not
memorizing how to solve familiar ones found only in
textbooks.
For those reasons, I demand the very best from my students (and
myself). I think my students are spending their (or their parents')
hard-earned money for the best education possible, so I try to do
my best to give them the best I can produce. I will not pander to
and insult my students by making my classes an easy A by diluting
them of rigorous content. Because administrators want easily
quantifiable measures by which to evaluate their faculty, such as
number of papers published, number of committees endured, or
popularity scores on student evaluations, there is a tremendous
pressure at UCSC to pander. This can be
seen from the fact that 79% of the grades given out to students
at UCSC are either As or Bs, and only 5% are non-passing (D or F).
My grading scheme in lower-division classes tends to be more
realistic. A median grade in my introductory chemistry class is a
C. Deal with it.
Finally, I try not to introduce politics into the classroom, at
least not on the level of the disheveled elbow-patched liberal arts
professor making snarky comments about how much our so-called
President resembles a chimpanzee. Where I do introduce it, it is
done on a much more subversive level. I place a premium upon
critical
thinking. My exams do not look like income tax forms to be
filled out. This is sometimes mistaken for making things hard. I
don't try to make things hard. I don't need to. Science is already
hard to begin with. I just try to equip my students for scientific
intellectual self-defense. If in doing so I create a small army of
hyper-critical malcontents, well, I'm not sorry.
Courses Taught
Some folks
in our department have the continuity of being assigned the same
courses each year so that they can plan ahead and use their time
efficiently. Others, well, don't enjoy the same perks. But the nice
part about this is I have a lot of teaching experience if I ever
decide I want to get a real job at a real university with a real
paycheck and real infrastructure. Until then, the following list
will doubtless grow. Chemistry 1C is my latest assignment, just to
make sure I get the message.
Undergraduate Chemistry Courses
- Chemistry 1C (Introductory Chemistry, third term)
- BMB 100B (Biochemistry -- kinetics and mechanisms)
- Chem 164 B (Physical Chemistry lab course)
- Biol 195 (Senior Thesis Research)
- Chem 180 A,B,C (Senior Thesis Research)
Graduate Chemistry Courses
- Chem 200 A (Biophysical Chemistry Methods)
- Chem 200 C (Nucleic Acid Structure and Function)
- Chem 292 (Research Seminars -- Faculty Introductions)
- Chem 299 A,B,C (Graduate Thesis Research)
- Biol 299 A,B,C (Graduate Thesis Research)
Guest appearances in other departments
- Biol 220 B (Molecular Biology graduate course --
crystallography section)
- BME 110 (Computational Biology Tools)
Links to some of my courses
Here are some of my course web pages, as well as a few other links:
