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Early in my term as editor of this
Journal, I received from a reader a letter that was intended to spur ideas for an
editorial comment. The writer had taught mathematics,
physics, and chemistry using high school curricula developed
during the 1960s. He argued that only one of these curricula,
the Chemical Education Materials Study (CHEM Study),
today remains an important influence on its discipline, at both
the high school and college levels. He attributed this to
Glenn Seaborg's leadership of the CHEM Study project.
Though I planned to base an editorial on this letter,
other subjects continually intervened. Glenn Seaborg's death
on February 25 of this year has prompted me to wait no
longer. In education, as in many other areas, Seaborg's
leadership made a tremendous difference. He served as an
excellent model of the melding of research, teaching, and
service-the often praised but seldom achieved ideal of an
academic career.
The CHEM Study project has been chronicled in a
book by Richard Merrill and David Ridgway
(1). Seaborg's foreword describes a meeting with a group from ACS and
NSF who had "a visionary plan to press upon me" for a new
high school chemistry curriculum. Although he was then
Chancellor of the University of California, Berkeley, and had
numerous other commitments that should have precluded
his taking on leadership of such a program, Seaborg
accepted. He immediately set about persuading other leaders, such
as J. Arthur Campbell and George C. Pimentel, to play
major roles in the project. In addition he helped set up a
steering committee that included high school and college teachers
as well as representatives from industry and ACS. In
describing his recruitment of Pimentel, Seaborg allowed that "It is
just possible that my role as Chancellor helped induce a
Berkeley faculty member to accept this demanding
assignment." Seaborg used his fame and his position effectively to
help achieve an important goal.
CHEM Study's influence went well beyond the
high school chemistry curriculum. It significantly influenced
the introductory college course, both because students were
expected to be better prepared and because their attitudes
about science were likely to be different. CHEM Study had an
extremely strong laboratory component. Students were
expected to carry out experiments, think about their results, and
use those results to discover characteristics of the
physicochemical world. In this regard it was a precursor of current
inquiry-based and discovery-based laboratory programs at the
college level.
CHEM Study also resulted in much greater
interaction between teachers at the high school and college levels.
Because the curriculum was quite different from what had
gone before, teacher's guides, instruction pamphlets,
achievement tests, and films were created to complement the text and laboratory
manual. A program of summer workshops was
designed to help teachers learn how to implement the new
curriculum, and many teachers today still remember fondly
their participation. Both professional development and
personal contacts served them well for many years. Teachers from
high schools and colleges who participated in the CHEM
Study writing teams were also greatly influenced.
Because certain kinds of experiments were difficult
or impossible to carry out in a high school setting, CHEM
Study prepared 27 films for students. CHEM Study's use of
media and its criteria for selection of film topics foreshadowed
the current interest in multimedia instruction
(2) and would sound up-to-date today. In addition, CHEM Study has
served as a model for subsequent curriculum development
projects. For example, the call for proposals for the five systemic
undergraduate chemistry initiatives currently being
supported by NSF included a reference to the dearth of curricular
innovation since that initiated in the 1960s by CHEM
Study and the Chemical Bond Approach (CBA) projects.
Glenn Seaborg's leadership in chemical education
arose out of his strong belief in the importance of making
science accessible to everyone. He was willing to take time out of
an extremely busy career to support education and to serve
the public as well as to serve science and advance his own
career. Some readers will remember that the discovery of
plutonium, which Seaborg had voluntarily kept secret throughout
World War II, was first announced on a radio program, in
answer to a question from a young student. His 15 papers in
this Journal, his participation in honoring each of the last
two editors upon their retirement, his many talks at meetings
of high school and college chemistry teachers, and most
recently his willingness to chair the Editorial Board of the
Journal 's Viewpoints series all attest to Seaborg's strong
commitment to science education.
In an interview published in this
Journal in 1975 (3), Seaborg indicated that if he were a 21-year-old
bachelor's degree holder starting his career in that year, he would
go into biology. "I believe that this is the area where the
greatest contributions to knowledge, to mankind, to human
welfare, to the satisfaction of one's own curiosity and one's
drive towards intellectual achievement can be made." This
indication of the goals to which his career was dedicated shows
why Glenn Seaborg was a great leader, and why his leadership
indeed made a tremendous difference.
Literature Cited
1. Merrill, R. J.; Ridgway, D. W.
The CHEM Study Story; Freeman: San Francisco, 1969.
2. Ibid., appendix C.
3. Seaborg, G. T.; Ridgway, D. W.
J. Chem. Educ. 1975, 52, 70-75.
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