Member and Mentor Appreciation Thread

  • Thread starter Thread starter Greg Bernhardt
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It's sure been a wild ride this year! Between some AI missteps and breaking LaTeX for a good portion of the year (at least we got dark mode out of it lol), Physics Forums remains the premium home for human first homework help and science discussion. I'm proud how we're navigating these challenges in a stalwart and forward facing nature. As we prepare to honor our human members (I think?) and human community for another year we should always center ourselves against the rise of trends and technology with what matters most. Human interaction. Let's not ever lose that.

I'm proud of this community, its members and staff. We change lives here. What we do matters. It makes a difference. PF is a great example of giving and receiving in return. We're heading into our 25th anniversary and over that time the staff sometimes collects praise the community gets (we have hundreds of examples just in the past 10 years). I want to share some of that in an aggregated, anonymous form via AI. Summarization is one good use of AI :smile:

🎓 Career & Academic Success Stories

Members consistently credit PF with helping them complete degrees, pass exams, and launch careers. Users have reported getting into PhD programs, completing Masters theses, passing national-level entrance exams, and landing jobs at major companies—all while attributing their success to the patient guidance received here. Many users have returned years later to thank the community for setting them on their career paths.

🏆 Quality of Moderation & Community Standards

One of the most frequent themes: users appreciate that PF maintains high standards, keeps pseudoscience out, and ensures discussions stay productive. Many compare PF favorably to other forums, noting our "signal-to-noise ratio" is exceptional. Users specifically praise the lack of crackpots, the professional atmosphere, and the way moderators handle discussions firmly but fairly.

🤝 Expert Help & Patience

Members consistently express amazement that highly qualified scientists, engineers, and professors volunteer their time to help strangers. The Socratic method used in homework help—guiding rather than giving answers—is frequently praised. Many note that helpers here are more patient and thorough than anywhere else online.

🌍 Global Scientific Community

Users highlight the unique aspect of connecting with experts worldwide, transcending national and cultural boundaries through a shared love of science. As one member eloquently put it: "The physics is the same and that's all that counts."

💚 Comparison to Other Platforms

Stack Exchange, Reddit, YouTube comments, and other social media are frequently mentioned—unfavorably. Users describe being banned, dismissed, or encountering hostility elsewhere, then finding PF to be a welcoming alternative with substantive help.

📚 Self-Learners & Returners

A significant portion of praise comes from self-taught learners, adults returning to education, and teachers refreshing their knowledge. PF fills a gap for those without access to traditional academic support.

Three Most Impactful Stories (Anonymized)
1. From Struggling Student to Olympic Medalist 🥉


A high school student faced a physics teacher who didn't support students or competitions. With no guidance at school, they turned to PF to prepare for national physics competitions. The mentors here answered their questions and helped them work through problems they couldn't solve alone.
The result: They won their national competition, represented their country at the International Physics Olympiad, and earned a bronze medal.

"Physics Forums has been a huge help during the preparations for the selections... I had to prepare by myself with a bunch of books, and Physics Forums was the place where I could ask for help with problems I didn't understand. So huge thanks to all mentors who have helped me on the way!"

2. A Decade Later: From Teenager to Tech Professional 💼

A member joined PF as a high school student, "bombarding" the forum with math and physics questions. Despite the questions sometimes being "silly," the mentors and advisors patiently provided hints and guidance rather than just answers.
Ten years later, they returned to share an update: they work as a software engineer at a major global tech company. They credit PF as instrumental in their growth and career, calling out specific members who helped them over a decade ago.

"PF has been instrumental in my growth and career... This would not have been possible without the great members in this forum!"

3. From "Dumb Questions" to AI Researcher 🔬

A chemical engineering student admits they asked "very dumb questions" on PF. One particular mentor always explained concepts thoroughly and patiently. Years later, while going through old photos, they found screenshots of those explanations they'd saved for reference.
Today, they hold a Masters in Chemical Engineering and work in AI applications for the field—a career path directly inspired by the interest that patient mentor helped develop.

"I went on to do my Masters in Chemical Engineering, thanks to you that I developed an interest in it... I genuinely owe you a lot and I mean it. Thanks for being there when I was stuck."

What Members Say Sets Us Apart
  • Theme — Representative Quote
  • Quality — "The largest & highest quality science community"
  • Moderation — "Keeping the experts in and the cranks away"
  • Community — "A beacon of light in the darkness of social media"
  • Help Style — "They help you learn, not just give answers"
  • Trust — "I accept what I read here as 'real' far more often than from any other source"
Thank you to every mentor, science advisor, homework helper, and member who makes Physics Forums what it is. These stories represent just a fraction of the lives touched by this community.
 
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Physics news on Phys.org
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Likes pinball1970 and Greg Bernhardt
berkeman, pasmith, Mark44,.. So many
 
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@PeroK . Stop complaining about AI - you're better by far!
 
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neilparker62 said:
@PeroK . Stop complaining about AI - you're better by far!
There's only one of me. AI can proliferate and multi-task.
 
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Congratulations fellow advisors, mentors and homework helpers past, present and to come.

PF forever!
 
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Thanks
 
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Thanks to @Baluncore for never hesitating to give deep and thorough explanations!
 
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And obviously my appreciation goes out to many many more
 
  • #10
Greg Bernhardt said:
Stack Exchange, Reddit, YouTube comments, and other social media are frequently mentioned—unfavorably. Users describe being banned, dismissed, or encountering hostility elsewhere, then finding PF to be a welcoming alternative with substantive help.
As much as I like PF, it is no alternative to
Stack Overflow
for surviving the subtleties, inconsistencies and implementation bugs of existing programming languages and coding tools. And I am thankful that I don‘t need to ask those questions there myself, because waiting hours, days, or even weeks for answers can be stressful and expensive.

And PF is also no alternative to the MathOverflow and Theoretical Computer Science StackExchange sites, where top researchers ask and answer research level questions. And their sister Mathematics and Computer Science sites are also very good and helpful, probably in part due to the very existence of their research level sisters.

Based on my reputation there, I should in principle also be able to say something about the Philosophy, Computational Science, and Physics StackExchange sites. They don‘t lack top researchers either, but somehow they are weaker than the sites I mentioned above. Maybe the subjects are not a good fit for the StackExchange format. Or maybe the moderation tools are too blunt for dealing with real crackpots (like John Duffield). Or perhaps the sites are too attractive for crackpots due to their popularity and gamification. And as a result, normal first time users experience hostility, like being dismissed or banned.
 
  • #11
It's the end of the year and once again I wish to thank the mentors and admins for their stedfast commitment to the PF cause and for cultivating a friendly yet professional milieu. I confess to having subscribed to a handful of social media in my past all of which I dropped due to a net repulsive force acting on me. With PF not only the net force is attractive, but I also find comfort in a friendly, respectful, tolerant, inclusive and sometimes humorous atmosphere. All thanks to our mentors who diligently ensure that the ship stays its course and dispatch malefactors, crackpots and shameless advertisers to the dreaded black hole where they rightfully belong.

Screen Shot 2025-12-30 at 11.04.21 AM.webp
 
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  • #12
As with every year, and, boy, for me, there are so many, I thank the moderation team for keeping the site clean, i.e., spam and crackpot-free. And I also thank the (sadly not so many as before) constant members and newcomers who make it, after more than 20 years, a virtual address worth visiting (almost) every day.
 
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