Undergrad faculty?

<p>Do the physics graduate teachers in Stanford (see link) teach undergrads?
Stanford</a> University Department of Physics - Faculty Research Interests</p>

<p>If not, can does anyone know the link where I can see undergrad physics profs?
Thanks.</p>

<p>Come on you guys. Help me. 25 views and no response?</p>

<p>I had a class from Savas Dimopolous freshman year. It was an IntroSem and I don't believe it's offered anymore, but I'm sure you could find some classes they teach. Check it out at bulletin.stanford.edu</p>

<p>You might go to <a href="http://axess.stanford.edu%5B/url%5D"&gt;http://axess.stanford.edu&lt;/a> and do a course search (link under the "Guest" tab). Specify the term (you'll need to search autumn, winter, and spring) and put undergraduate as the course career; hit "additional search criteria" and put in the professor's last name.</p>

<p>yes, the faculty listed on your link is the faculty that does the undergrad teaching.</p>

<p>I'd recommend stanfordcourses.com instead of Axess. The interface is a lot easier to use. (Click on the "GER's" link to get a detailed search.)</p>

<p>I'm pretty sure all the undergrad courses are taught by faculty.</p>

<p>Both my physics teachers that thought me were on that list. Doug Osheroff (Nobel prize winner) and Leanord Susskind (one of the fathers of string theory) who teach Physics 43 and 41 respectively.</p>

<p>I think Leonard Susskind is teaching an introsem this year, too.</p>

<p>Ooh, if he's teaching an introsem, I'd recommend looking into that. It might be pretty intense, but you'll probably learn a lot of cool physics.</p>

<p>Osheroff usually teaches an introsem on photography.</p>