I have no idea about CS, but I can advice you good Geophysics programs. Your background is great for it. This is an interesting field and it is possible to get in!
I'm not in either of those disciplines, but I do have tangential connections to physics education and STEM education. For those fields, it depends on what you want: if you want physics education (where the focus is on the physics and how students learn it/understand it), go for a physics department with research in physics education (http://www.compadre.org/per/programs/). Same thing with other sciences. In those cases, you are getting the science degree with a specialization in education. If you are interested in teaching and learning and it happens to be in physics classes, look into education departments/programs to see what's there. It's a difference in focus and what you want to do with the degree. For example, you could teach physics at the undergrad level with a PhD in physics (focus on physics education research) but probably not with a science education degree.
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Good luck!
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