Alexander Lvovsky is an experimental physicist. He was born and raised in Moscow and did his undergraduate in Physics at the Moscow Institute of Physics and Technology. In 1993, he became a graduate student
in Physics at Columbia University in New York City. His thesis research, conducted under the supervision of Dr. Sven R. Hartmann, was in the field of coherent optical transients
in atomic gases. After completing his Ph. D. in 1998, he spent a year at the University of California, Berkeley as a postdoctoral fellow in the Department of Physics, and then five
years at Universität Konstanz in Germany, first as an Alexander von Humboldt postdoctoral fellow, then as a research group leader in quantum-optical information technology.
In 2004 he became Professor in the Department of Physics and Astronomy at the University of Calgary, and from autumn 2018, a professor at the University of Oxford.
Alexander is a past Canada Research Chair, a lifetime member of the American Physical Society, a Fellow of the Optical Society and a winner of many awards – most notably the International Quantum Communications award,
commendation letter from the Prime Minister of Canada and the Emmy Noether research award of the German Science Foundation. His work has been featured by CBC, NBC, Wired, New Scientist, MIT Technology Review, the Guardian,
TASS and even the Daily Mail.
One of COMPOS's key tenets is its accessibility. Any student who loves science and who has a natural sense of curiosity, regardless of their background, can pursue their passion and find likeminded people through COMPOS – and that’s
how it should be.
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Rachael Hawkins is a teacher and project manager from West Oxfordshire. She decided at 11 years old that she would be an astrophysicist and became the first person in her family to attend university, joining Imperial College to study for her MSci Physics and then Queen Mary, London where she earned her PhD in Brane Cosmology under the supervision of Prof James Lidsey.
Rachael had the opportunity to teach cosmology to school teachers during her PhD and took part in summer extension programmes for sixth formers. She realised teaching and communicating science was going to be a big part of her future.
She qualified as a teacher in 2004, and worked as lead teacher for gifted and talented students, head of physics and lead KS4 teacher before being poached by the Institute of Physics to run the Stimulating
Physics programme in Oxfordshire between 2010-2012. During this time, Rachael supported 12 local schools to upskill physics teaching staff, train technicians and create bespoke schemes of work as well as organising a teacher CPD event
at Rutherford Appleton giving local teachers a chance to hear from top scientists.
She has worked as a consultant and teacher trainer for STEM Learning, offering training to non-specialist science teachers, and working with technicians to devise a technicians' training course to
improve the quality of practical work in schools. She continues to tutor students from GCSE to undergraduate level because she loves teaching.
More recently, Rachael was head of services for a national charity delivering public health programmes. She was responsible for 36 programmes, monitoring and evaluation and the development of a specialist course for practitioners
to be accredited through a national award body. She draws on her project management experience to support COMPOS by running operations for the programme.
The gleam in someone's eye and the smile that spreads over their face as they grasp a concept for the first time is awesome. To know you had a part in that, together you shared a moment of mind-expanding comprehension, it's the best
thing.
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Vlad Chernov is an educator. He did his undergraduate studies in Applied Physics and Maths at the Moscow Institute of Physics and Technology (MIPT), followed by
a 2-year Masters programme in Aerodynamics, and 9 months in MIPT business school. Vlad started teaching Physics and Maths in 2006 in Moscow, he worked at LGEG A-level school, and also worked at the Anglo-American School of Moscow.
He created 30+ educational videos for the SkillUp YouTube channel.
He moved to UK in 2015 to do a PGCE at the University of Manchester. Vlad taught Physics and Further Maths at The Royal Grammar School High Wycombe for 6 years,
and was the head teacher of Algorithmics UK - an online school teaching programming (Python and Scratch). In 2021 was invited to join Alex Lvovsky to launch COMPOS.
I love physics and I want my students to love it as much as I do. Physics is fun and it should be fun to learn. It is a pity that sometimes learning physics in school comes down to memorising facts. I always try to introduce science
as a way of thinking, perceiving the life around you. The world becomes infinitely more beautiful when you understand how it works.
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Jackie Jordan is the administrator for COMPOS. She was born and bred in Oxford and knows her way around Oxford and the University.
Jackie is an experienced administrator, with 30 years plus experience in higher education administration. She has worked at the University of Oxford since 1999, initially as Programme Manager for Professional Programmes Master’s in Software
Engineering and Software & Systems Security. Jackie assisted in the latter gaining accreditation from GCHQ in 2014.
Jackie has an Undergraduate Advanced Diploma in Computing from Oxford, undertaken part-time at the Department for Continuing Education.
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