Films for the Humanities and Sciences: Princeton, NJ,
1997. Videodiscs. $129 per disc or $1895 for set of 16.
Further information on this product can be found at
http://www.films.com. EJW
Basic Laboratory Chemistry is a series of sixteen
programs presenting demonstrations of many processes and
experimental techniques used in the chemistry laboratory in both
macroscale and microscale. The programs are very well done,
each topic being presented clearly and concisely with no
fluff. The topics cover the whole range of college chemistry
laboratory instruction, particularly organic chemistry. Topics
included in the programs are assembling macroscale and
microscale apparatus, spectroscopy, chromatography, and
procedures such as filtration, extraction, distillation, and titration.
I found the programs to be of similar quality to other
series from Films for the Humanities and Sciences.
The intended audience is definitely college,
especially organic chemistry, although a few programs would be
applicable to first-year general chemistry. High school
chemistry teachers would not find the series very useful because
most high schools would not have the equipment to perform
the laboratory procedures demonstrated.
The programs are excellent ancillaries to augment
instructor demonstrations of techniques, setups, and
processes. Instructor demos would allow more student interaction
and questions, plus the ability to see the actual demonstration
"up close and personal". These programs could then be
utilized by students for review and study. They would be
particularly useful for training teaching assistants and research
assistants for their teaching responsibilities and
research.
I like this series very much. It has a no-nonsense,
straight-to-the-point approach. The topics range from the
simplest, such as folding filter paper, to the complex, such as using
an atomic absorption spectrophotometer. It is available in both videocassette and videodisc. The videodisc series includes
a booklet with each disc with bar codes. This allows the
user to access specific portions of the program. The major
drawback is the price. The cost per program and for the entire
series is high, especially when the instructor can easily
demonstrate most of the procedures.
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