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Chemistry

By Mary Bigelow

Posted on 2009-10-05

What a bonanza for chemistry/physical science teachers this fall–first, the September issue of The Science Teacher (with the theme of Chemistry for a Changing World), and now the October issue of Science Scope (with the theme of Chemistry). No matter which grade level you teach, there will be ideas in both issues for advanced students and those who are novices at learning about chemistry.
Physical and chemical changes are difficult concepts for younger or less-experienced students. Check out activities with real-world applications: No More Leaks in which students explore super-absorbent polymers through an inquiry-based investigation, Korean Kimchi Chemistry which looks a chemical reactions such as fermentation, Watching the Pot to Improve Inquiry Skills (who knew that watching water boil could be so interesting!), Chemistry in Action: Triple Delight which looks at the chemistry concepts in making ice cream (but not in the lab – try the FCS kitchens), and Enhancing and Student Understanding of Physical and Chemical Changes with lots of examples for demonstrations. And if you ever wondered what inquiry-based science looks like in a classroom, the authors of Inquiry-Based Dissolving give you a peek into their classroom investigation, complete with a step-by-step description of the activity, questions, student discussions, photos and examples of student work.
How many of our students have been assigned the traditional “element report”? In the BI times (Before Internet), the main goal of this activity was to get students to find information about a particular element. This was usually accomplished in the library, using text resources. But today, with a few clicks in a browser (or better yet, a search in SciLinks with the keyword “periodic table”) students can get pictures and lots of information about the characteristics and properties of any element. So finding the information is not the exercise it used to be. Why would we ask students to copy facts about an element when the information is already and readily available? Consider the activities in That Is Not Where That Element Goes or The Element Walk as alternatives. If you go to SciLinks and search for “Periodic Table,” you’ll get many versions of the periodic table with information on each element (which could be used to make the cards for the above activity. Some of them are downright fun. The Poetic Table of the Elements has a traditional-looking periodic table, and for each element there are poems about it But it’s really fun to see what people came up with. In the Periodic Table Printmaking Project, artists created blocks for each of the elements. The descriptions of each element include some of its physical properties, but the interesting part is how and why the artists chose their designs. And I really enjoy the Periodic Table of Videos with a short video segment for each element.
Go to SciLinks for more resources to Explore Chemistry. Two of my favorites are Metals in Aqueous Solutions – a simulation that would be great if you have an interactive white board or other projection device and Biochemistry – Carbohydrates, which is part of a larger site on biochemistry with descriptions of other compounds, such as lipids, nucleic acids, proteins, and enzymes, in simple language.
As a former chemistry major, I’m really excited by these two issues!

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