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When Neil Gordon founded this Journal in 1924, a major goal was to “encourage community of effort in chemical education”. As ideas about education have matured and media of communication have changed, means for encouraging community of effort have broadened. This Journal has always served as a focal point for the chemical education community and an important medium for collaboration among chemical educators, and we don’t expect that to change. We continually seek new ways to support community of effort, and now much of that community is on the Web.
An example is a new online column, JCE ChemInfo:
Organic, edited by
Hans Reich. I encourage you to use it and contribute
to it. JCE ChemInfo: Organic is a dream come true for those teaching
organic chemistry. It includes tables of pKa values in water, DMSO, and the gas
phase for hundreds of compounds, tables of proton and 13C chemical shifts, and
definitions of acronymns, reaction names, and other nomenclature. Reich has also
included links to other sources of nomenclature rules and data. As a tool for
generating homework, quiz, and exam questions this collection is excellent. JCE ChemInfo:
Organic also provides in one place an invaluable source of a broad range of data
and information for students working on assignments or research projects. Even
though I am not an organic chemist and do not teach organic courses, the value
of this Web site is obvious to me. The feedback from those who do teach organic
has been uniformly enthusiastic.
Many who have visited JCE ChemInfo: Organic have suggested other data
that could be included. Almost invariably those data are available somewhere
on the Web, but they may or may not be in a format that is accessible to students,
and they may or may not have been vetted for accuracy. JCE ChemInfo:
Organic provides references to the original papers that reported the data, which
are organized so that students and teachers can easily locate what they need.
If you have your own collections of data and links to Web sites that complement JCE ChemInfo:
Organic, column editor Reich would
like to incorporate them into the collection. To contribute, email Reich with
a description of the data and explanation of their use.
Organic is not the only chemistry subdiscipline that makes use of a broad range of data. JCE would like to find volunteer editors for columns similar to JCE ChemInfo: Organic that support teaching analytical, inorganic, physical, and biochemistry courses—and many more. If you have collected this kind of information for your students in any area of chemical science, please consider volunteering your site to be included in JCE Online. If you are willing to receive and evaluate contributions from others, how about becoming a column editor? Just contact me and describe what you are interested in contributing.
JCE ChemInfo: Organic is similar to other collections in the National Science Digital Library (1) and in the JCE Digital Library. You are also encouraged to contribute to any of these JCE DLib collections:
-
JCE SymMath—teaching materials that make use of symbolic
mathematics packages such as Mathcad and Mathematica (2)
- JCE QBank—questions intended for use in lectures
(ConcepTests), homework assignments, quizzes, and exams (3)
- JCE DigiDemos—an online forum on chemical demonstrations
that includes all Tested Demonstrations (4)
- JCE WebWare—Web-based materials, including simulations,
animations, and interactive calculations and graphs (5)
- JCE LrnComOnline—online instructional modules designed
to foster learning communities involving students on different campuses via
electronic communication (6)
In addition we would like to create new collections and to augment the collection
of manipulable molecular structures available in our monthly Featured Molecules
column and in JCE WebWare (7). With your
help we can continue to improve and expand JCE’s support for
community of effort in chemical education. Please contact me with your contributions
and suggestions regarding our community.

Literature Cited (all sites accessed Jan 2005)
- National Science Digital Library.
- Zielinski,
T. J. J. Chem. Educ. 2004, 81, 155–158; Web
site.
- J. Chem. Educ. 2004, 81, 158; Web
site.
- Vitz, E. J.
Chem. Educ. 2004, 81, 160; Web
site.
- Coleman, W. F.; Fedosky, E. W. J.
Chem. Educ. 2004, 81, 159; Web
site.
- Zielinski, T. J.; Long, G. J.
Chem. Educ. 2005, 82, 335; Web
site.
- Coleman, W. F. J.
Chem. Educ. 2005, 82, 264; Featured Molecules; Chime Library.
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