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Characterization of the four-year undergraduate quantum curriculum across US institutions

POSTER

Abstract



Quantum mechanics is an integral course for physics students. An understanding of quantum concepts is imperative for enrollment in physics graduate programs, participating in research within physics fields, and employment with companies developing quantum technologies. This study analyzes 188 US research-intensive institutions' course catalogs to determine the role and extent of quantum mechanics in their undergraduate physics programs. All of the institutions required one course on quantum concepts, 92% required two courses, and half required three. Among institutions with complete class data (n=56), the quantum curriculum was analyzed using course syllabi. The mean number of classroom hours spent on quantum concepts was 63.5 hours with a standard deviation of 28.1 hours. The most commonly taught themes in the quantum curriculum were the Schrodinger equation and three-dimensional quantum mechanics. However, the Stern-Gerlach Experiment was only included in 28% of the course outlines. Despite current efforts to promote a spin-first approach, this study found the traditional position-first approaches were still more common as they were used by 73.7% of instructors.

Publication: Buzzell, A., Barthelemy, R., & Atherton, T. (2025). Quantum curriculum in the US: Quantifying the instructional time, content taught, and paradigms used, preprint on arXiv:2407.15977

Presenters

  • Alexis Taylor Buzzell

    University of Utah

Authors

  • Alexis Taylor Buzzell

    University of Utah

  • Tim J Atherton

    Tufts University

  • RAMON S BARTHELEMY

    University of Utah