

Cristian Opazo
Bio [2004]
Cristian Opazo works as an academic computing
consultant at Vassar College in New York, developing and managing
various research and teaching projects with faculty across the science
departments. He also holds an adjunct position in the Physics and
Astronomy Department, where he teaches computational methods to
science undergraduates, focusing on modeling and visualization of
dynamical systems. Cristian did graduate work in experimental particle
physics working for the DZero experiment at Fermilab. He earned a master's
degree in physics from Michigan State University in 2000.
His main interest in NKS is bringing the study of simple programs into
existing college-level science curricula. He is currently developing a new
course based on NKS concepts and methods. He is specifically working on a
comprehensive cellular automaton model for fluid dynamics and turbulence.
Cristian was born and raised in Chile, where he got his B.S. degree in
physics and a passion for teaching. He also enjoys traveling the globe,
writing, and dancing the tango.
Project Title Integrating the Study of Simple Programs into an
Existing Computational Methods Course at a Liberal Arts Institution
Project
The concepts and methods involved in the study of simple programs as
outlined in the NKS book require a rather dramatic rethinking of
well-established paradigms such as the scientific method and the
universality of mathematics, which makes its study a highly
nontrivial endeavor. On the other hand, it can be pointed out that
even the first approaches to the "NKS way of thinking" involve very
essential and attractive methodologies. The fact, for example, that
when we study the behavior of the basic set of elementary cellular
automata we are actually dealing with a very manageable and finite set
of objects, provides the student, researcher, and experimenter with a
compact framework unlike others within the traditional sciences.
The key question in regards to NKS in education, as formulated by
Stephen Wolfram during this summer school, is "to decide what is the
set of basic principles that should be the fabric of scientific
education." Considering the numerous paradigm shifts in the history
of science, how should we, as educators, eventually confront a new
one?
This is why I recognize the environment of liberal arts education as a
very fertile ground for the spreading of these concepts, particularly
amongst younger underclassmen. In my experience as a lecturer in
experimental and computational physics, I have seen, year after year,
that the most successful students in my computational methods class
are mostly those who have very little or no previous programming
experience. I interpret this fact not as much as a conceptual conflict
in the learning process, but rather a procedural one, for some
students tend to replicate the methods previously learned.
During this year's NKS Conference some initial efforts in relation to
educational projects were presented, mostly in the context of K-12
education. A systematic, serious approach at college-level education
is needed, and that is what I intend to focus on. As a first example,
I will be studying the two-dimensional cellular automaton model for
fluid dynamics and turbulence, a system that has not been fully
implemented in Mathematica.
Favorite two-color, radius-2 rule
Rule chosen: 1522545636
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