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xenia May 15 2010, 21:43:17 UTC
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!

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anonymous May 23 2010, 23:04:48 UTC
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.

Good luck!

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elbie May 23 2010, 23:44:56 UTC
Thanks!

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