1930 was born in new york, USA on may 26th.
Father and mother Luo are both public school students studying in the United States.
The following year, his parents took him back to China.
After returning to China, Mr. Nai-tuan Chao worked as a research professor and head of the Department of Economics in Peking University (1931-1949).
My mother, Ms. Luo, is the first generation nutritionist in China and a professor at Beijing Normal University.
Mr. Zhao Kaihua was admitted to the Physics Department of Peking University with 1946.
1950 graduated and stayed in school to teach.
1958, he returned to China with an associate doctorate from the Soviet Union.
After graduating from college, Mr. Zhao began his 60-year college basic physics teaching career. Teacher Zhao loves teaching and actively studies teaching contents and methods. Because Mr. Zhao has a solid theoretical foundation and a wide range of knowledge, his lectures are both breadth and depth; It is rigorous, refined, vivid and beautiful. All the students who have listened to his class feel that listening to his class is a kind of enjoyment.
He and Chen Ximou's electromagnetism and Zhong Xihua's optics won the first prize of 1987 national excellent textbook.
Qualitative and Semi-quantitative Physics won the first prize 1995 as an excellent textbook of the State Education Commission.
Since the mid-1990s, Mr. Zhao, as the main author and collaborator, has compiled five volumes of New Concept Physics for more than 10 years: mechanical volume, thermal volume, quantum physics volume (the above three volumes cooperated with Professor Luo of Sun Yat-sen University), electromagnetic volume (cooperated with Professor Chen Ximou) and optical volume.
"New Concept Mechanics" (teaching content and curriculum system reform for 2 1 century) won the first prize of national excellent teaching achievement 1997, and "New Concept Physics" won the first prize of scientific and technological progress of the State Education Commission 1998.
In 2005, the reform and construction of a series of electromagnetics courses presided over by Professor Zhao won the first prize of national teaching achievement.
In view of Mr. Zhao's great contribution and outstanding achievements to the basic physics education in colleges and universities in China, and in order to express his high respect and deep gratitude to the teachers engaged in the basic physics teaching in China, the Teaching Steering Committee of the Basic Physics Course in colleges and universities of the Ministry of Education and the Physics Teaching Professional Committee of the Chinese Physics Society awarded Mr. Zhao the "Outstanding Achievement Award in Physics Teaching" in 2008.
From 1983 to 1990, Mr. Zhao served as the head of the Department of Physics in Peking University after Professor Yu Fuchun.
He has served for a long time as the vice chairman of the Chinese Physical Society (two sessions,1991-kloc-0/999), the director of the Teaching Committee and the director of the Terminology Committee (three sessions, 199 1-2003), and concurrently as a member of the National Natural Science Terminology Committee and the Physical Terminology Review Committee.
1994 presided over the 25th international physics olympiad hosted by the Chinese Physical Society).
He presided over the formulation of new physical terms (199 1 year and 1996) and edited the English-Chinese Physical Vocabulary, which made important contributions to the standardization of physical terms in China after Wang Zhuxi and other physicists of the older generation.
Mr. Zhao also served as a member of the branch of the International Federation of Physics Teachers three times before and after, and did a lot of useful work for the exchange of physics education between China and foreign countries. He has been abroad for many times to attend IUPAP conferences and ICPE and various physics education conferences supported by it.
He also organized and recommended the introduction and translation of some excellent foreign physics textbooks (such as Physics: Concepts and Connections by A. Hobson and Hungarian high school physics textbooks edited by G. Marx).