|
CheMentor Software System
H. A. Peoples. Computerized Learning
Enhancements: http://www.ecis.com/~clehap; email:
clehap@ecis.com; 1996 - 1997.
CheMentor: Calculating Chemical Formulae, v. 2.0
Single copy $39.95; site license fees available.
CheMentor: Stoichiometry I, v. 2.0
Single copy $29.95; site license fees available.
CheMentor: Practice Items I, v. 2.0
Single copy $29.95; site license fees available.
CheMentor: Thermodynamics I, v. 2.0
Single copy $39.95; site license fees available.
CheMentor: Toolkit, v. 2.1
Single copy $39.95; site license fees available.
CheMentor is a series of software packages for
introductory-level chemistry, which includes Practice Items
(I), Stoichiometry (I), Calculating Chemical Formulae, and
the CheMentor Toolkit. The first three packages provide
practice problems for students and various types of help to
solve them; the Toolkit includes "calculators"
for determining chemical quantities as well as the
Practice Items (I) set of problems. The set of software packages
is designed so that each individual product acts as a module of a
common CheMentor program. As the name CheMentor implies,
the software is designed as a "mentor" for students learning
introductory chemistry concepts and problems. The typical
use of the software would be by individual students (or
perhaps small groups) as an adjunct to lectures. CheMentor is
a HyperCard application and the modules are
HyperCard stacks. The requirements to run the packages include a Macintosh computer with at least 1 MB of RAM, a hard
drive with several MB of available space depending upon the
packages selected (10 MB were required for all the packages
reviewed here), and the Mac operating system 6.0.5 or later.
Practice Items (I) provides over 1000 exercises
covering isotopes, formulas and names for ions and
compounds, moles and molar masses, percentage composition of a
compound, oxidation numbers, and molarity. Each
section of the practice items explains what types of exercises are available
and what students must know to successfully handle the
exercises. Help is available in several different forms. For
example, in the oxidation numbers section, one problem asks for the
oxidation number of carbon in
CO2. If a student needs help, he or she can read a description of oxidation numbers and
how they are assigned, consult step-by-step rules for
assigning oxidation numbers, or, using the "Peek" button, see the
correct, worked-out solution. The available help is always
appropriate to the current section. After a student has
entered an answer, pressing the "Judge" button determines if
the answer is correct and provides some feedback about why
an answer is incorrect. The feedback may be minimal in
some cases, such as in the oxidation number example where
the answer is judged correct or incorrect, or more extensive,
as in the case of writing formulas for ions where the
feedback points to the part of the formula that is incorrect.
Stoichiometry (I) contains about 80 problems in
three categories: single and double replacement reactions
(how much product can be obtained from a certain amount
of starting reagent), limiting reactant problems, and
percentage yield problems. Calculating Chemical Formulae
offers over 75 different problems in which students
determine chemical formulas from various types of data including
percentage composition, mass composition, synthesis
data, combustion analysis, and dehydration analysis as well
as combinations of data. As an example, a problem from
the Stoichiometry (I) module in the limiting reagent
category is "Zinc can displace copper from copper(II) nitrate
solution as follows:
Zn(s) + Cu(NO3)2 (aq)
--> Cu(s) + Zn(NO3)2 (aq)
What mass of copper is formed when 0.425 g of zinc is
reacted with 50.00 mL of 0.150 M copper(II) nitrate
solution? Answer: _____________ g"
The student is expected to work out the problem
with pencil, paper, and calculator, and then enter the solution
in the answer blank. When a student does not know how
to arrive at an answer, help is again available in several
forms. First, there is a "Text" button,
which opens a window with text that describes the general concepts involved in the
current section. For the stoichiometry module the
scrolling "Text" window starts with
"A balanced chemical equation shows you the numbers of moles of reactants and
products that are involved in a chemical
reaction." After scrolling through this general information, a student could come
to "First we will consider the limiting reactant approach
to solving the problem. To begin you should calculate the
number of moles of each of the reactants you are dealing
with. This may be done by" and so on. Then there is a
"Recipes" button that provides general, step-by-step instructions
for solving problems of the current type and sometimes
including alternative approaches. For the example
problem above, a recipe for calculating a theoretical yield is given.
These text and recipe options may get some
students on the right track, but probably the most helpful source
of assistance is the help selections that correspond directly
to the problem at hand. For the example above, a student
can get help at various stages, such as finding the moles of
reactants, finding the limiting reactant, and setting up the
calculation of the yield. Each help window gives the data
from the problem and provides answer boxes for the student
to enter the result of the next step in the calculation. In
the example, the "Finding Moles of Reactants" help lists the
reagents, Zn 0.425 g and
Cu(NO3)2 50.00 mL:0.150 M, and
expects the student to enter the moles or millimoles of
each reagent. A "Judge" button will determine if the answer
to each step is correct and provide some feedback on an
incorrect entry. If the student does not know how to do this
individual step, he or she can use the "Peek" button to see
the worked-out solution. There is also a "Why?" button that
provides some basic information about why the current step
is useful in the overall problem solution.
The CheMentor Toolkit has a series of calculators
for determining molar masses, molarity, molality, and pH,
and for converting between moles and masses. Also included
are a set of 20 recipes for solving problems and the exercises
of the Practice (I) module. The 20 recipes cover more
topics than the other modules and include such items as
molecular weight from percentage composition, molecular
weight from osmotic pressure, percentage yield of reactions,
balancing redox equations, and finding
Ksp from solubility data. The "molecular weight from percentage composition"
recipe is, as an example, "Starting with the % of each element: 1.
Assume that you have 100 g of compound. 2. Calculate the
number of moles of each element in your 100 g of compound. 3.
Using the number of moles of each element in your 100 g of
compound. 3. Using the number of moles of each element, find
the mole ratio. 4. If necessary, modify the mole ratio to make sure
it contains only integers. 5. Now that you have the empirical
formula, use it to find the molecular formula." Because the
calculators and recipes are designed for use with
problems other than those in CheMentor, they can be used for
doing and checking homework problems.
The calculators and recipes are purposely not
available when students are working problems in the CheMentor modules. This might help allay worries that the
availability of a nice list of recipes could encourage an
algorithmic approach to problem solving in which students look
through a Rolodex-like list of algorithms, find the proper one,
and then "plug and chug". Memorizing algorithms may not
imply understanding of the concepts involved, although
the recipes of the Toolkit may indeed help students get the
right answer to many of the typical problems in
introductory chemistry. Instructors might appreciate the calculators
for their own use when formulating exam questions and
writing answer keys.
A printed User's Guide is provided with
each CheMentor module. The guides adequately describe
the straightforward installation procedures. Each guide
provides a tutorial for learning CheMentor and the
operation of the individual module. Students will probably not
need to look at the manual, although a brief orientation
provided by an instructor might be helpful to acclimate students
to CheMentor. The user's guides also provide a quick
reference section and a brief instructor's guide (except for the
Toolkit, which is geared toward purchase by students).
The instructor's guides give some suggestions on how the
software can be used with classes.
The content of the reviewed modules includes
many early concepts in the typical chemistry curriculum.
These modules are appropriate for students first learning the
material at the high school or college level, and perhaps
also as review for students expected to know most of it at a
more advanced introductory level. One can purchase those
modules that will be of most use; all will use the
same CheMentor application. Other CheMentor modules not
reviewed here can be added (an additional
thermodynamics module is available). The modules address areas well
suited to a computer approach. For example, whereas
extensive lectures on nomenclature might not be fun for either
instructors or students, this software allows students to
work on nomenclature to their heart's content in an
environment under their control.
The user interface for CheMentor is adequate.
While the individual modules are tailored to the particular
topics, they are similar in design. Navigation through the
modules is via a combination of buttons and menu items on the
windows and items from the main pull-down menus.
Students should be able to find their way around CheMentor,
although the program might seem confusing at times
because it has much to it and there are different ways of
accessing information. With help available in several forms,
sometimes many windows (1 ¥
10 - 23 mol) are on the screen at one time while one is working a problem. To get to a
new problem or another type of problem, one must press
the "Next/Menu" button, bringing up yet another window
with the choices "Try another", "Main Menu", and "Cancel".
Fortunately, the open windows are closed automatically after
a new problem is selected. A nice feature often used
throughout the modules is that, rather than blasting the
student with a big window full of text all at once, the student
can step through digestible-sized points one-by-one, using a
"More" button. For example, the five steps in the
"molecular weight from percent composition" recipe described above
are displayed step by step using the "More" button.
Significant figures and units are checked in the results of
calculations. The calculators can use decimal or scientific notation.
Some minor bugs were found in the calculators and reported
The CheMentor series is designed as an aid to
learning chemistry. It does not provide a first exposure to
topics, nor are the modules flashy, multimedia
extravaganzas. They are straightforward, solid products that can help
motivated students master concepts and practice solving
problems. The modules provide sensible, practical help
toward solving problems and patient feedback to student
responses. They are worthy of consideration by instructors who
wish to provide computer-based help for concepts from
introductory chemistry and whose students have access
to Macintosh computers.
|