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James
Trefil
Winner!
Popular Science Literature
James
Trefil was born in Chicago and educated in the public schools. After
receiving a B.S. in physics from the University of Illinois, he
won a Marshall scholarship to Oxford University, where he studied
physics and the philosophy of science and received the B.A. and
M.A. degrees. He finished his studies as a National Science Foundation
Fellow at Stanford University, where he received an M.S. and Ph.D.
in theoretical physics.
Prof. Trefil has written extensively about science for the general
audience, including more than 25 books. He is the Contributing Editor
for Science for USA TODAY Weekend. He serves as a regular contributor
and science consultant for Smithsonian and Astronomy Magazines.
He has served as a science commentator and member of the Science
Advisory Board for National Public Radio and for numerous PBS productions.
He is Chief Science Consultant to the McDougal-Lyttell Middle School
Science Project.
He is a Fellow of the American Physical Society, the American Association
of the Advancement of Science, and the World Economic Forum. He
is a member of the Davos Global Issues Group and is a General Councillor
of the American Physical Society. Prof. Trefil received the 2000
Andrew W. Gemant Award for linking physics to the arts and humanities,
given by the American Institute of Physics. He is a recipient of
the American Association for the Advancement of Science Westinghouse
Science Journalism Award and of the John Simon Guggenheim Fellowship.
He has been named a Phi Beta Kappa national lecturer for 2003-2004.
His interest in scientific literacy began with a contributed essay
to E. D. Hirsch's Cultural Literacy and continued through participation
as a co author of the New Dictionary of Cultural Literacy (3rd edition,
2002). His textbook, The Sciences: An Integrated Approach (with
Robert Hazen, 4th ed., 2003), has been widely adopted, and he served
on the Content Review Board for the National Science Education Standards.
He has published over 100 papers in professional journals and has
made contributions to research in elementary particle physics, fluid
mechanics, medical physics (including cancer research) and the earth
sciences.
Books by
James Trefil:
The Nature of Science
Science Matters (with Robert Hazen)
Are We Unique?
The Dark Side of the Universe
The Edge of the Unknown
Meditations at Sunset
A Scientist in the City
A Scientist at the Seashore
From Atoms to Quarks
The Unexpected Vista
Sharks Have No Bones
The Moment of Creation
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