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Classroom Activities Mean Teamwork
As much as any other facet of the editing and
production of the Journal, the Classroom Activity series means
teamwork! The aim is for activities to be interesting and
accessible to introductory students, based on inexpensive
and readily available materials, connected by content to some
part of the Journal issue, able to be integrated into the high
school curriculum, and safe. There need to be questions posed
and answers at the ready. Additional information in print and
on the Web needs to be identified and checked. The
activities are designed to be ready for teachers to hand to students,
so they really need to work-that means that they go through
a lot of testing in Journal House where there is, quite
fittingly, no lab.
This is a tall order, one requiring someone with
experience in high school teaching. From the start
of the Activities in September 1997, Nancy Gettys has
had a major role in their success. While Nancy's primary
responsibility is as the Technical Editor of JCE
Software, she has experience in teaching high school and has called
on that experience to try and test, expand, try again, plan
the illustrations (remember the photographs of the activities
with surface phenomena that were featured in the table of
contents of the February 1998 issue?), and perhaps hardest
of all-tell us when something will just not work in high
school. Nancy continues to work with the Classroom Activities,
but she now has a colleague in fellow high school teacher
Erica Jacobsen who has recently joined our staff.
Introducing...
Erica Jacobsen joined our staff last fall as an editorial
assistant and has recently become an assistant editor. She received
her undergraduate degree in education from the University of
Wisconsin-Madison. Her teaching licenses include certifications
in chemistry, physics, biology, and natural science for grades
six through twelve. During her undergraduate years, she
worked with the Chemical Education Group. Her undergraduate research and senior thesis
were directed by John W. Moore and centered on the subject
of HIV and its use as a topic in the chemistry curriculum.
The research culminated in writing and publishing "HIV-1
Protease: An Enzyme at Work," a videotape and
teacher/student guide offered by the Journal of Chemical Education
Software.
After graduation, Erica taught chemistry, AP
chemistry, and physics for two years at a rural public high school
in Minnesota. During her teaching, as a reader of the
Journal, she was delighted to see the introduction of the
Classroom Activities feature. She found the ready-made activities a
great complement to her "hands-on, minds-on" curriculum.
Due to her husband's job transfer, she has returned to
Madison and is even more delighted to now be a part of the
development of Classroom Activities. Her duties at Journal
House include helping to test, research, and write Classroom
Activities. She divides her time between working at
Journal House, taking additional science coursework at the
university for professional development, and tutoring chemistry
students. She is settling in to her new life in Madison and
she and her husband enjoy exploring the Wisconsin
outdoors together.
European Conference on Research in Chemical Education
The 5th European Conference on Research in
Chemical Education (5th ECRICE) will be held from
September 21-25, 1999, at the University of Ioannina, Ioannina,
Greece. It will include plenary lectures, symposia, workshops,
poster sessions, and social events. The working language of the
conference will be English, but contributions in French are
also invited. For more information contact Georgios
Tsarparlis, University of Ioannina, Department of Chemistry,
GR-451 10 Ioannina, Greece; phone: +30 651 98431; fax: +30
651 44989; email: gtsepar@cc.uoi.gr. The conference World
Wide Web site is
http://www.uoi.gr/conf_sem/ecrice5.
Symposium on Natural Products: Chemistry and Bioactivity
Hauser and the Department of Chemistry and
Biochemistry at the University of Colorado at Boulder are offering
a three-day symposium on natural products which
include pharmaceuticals, nutraceuticals, and consumer products,
to be held May 19-21, 1999. For further information or
to make arrangements to attend, contact University of
Colorado at Boulder, Attn: Rosemary Trujillo, Campus Box 215,
Boulder, CO 80309-0215; email:
rosemary.trujillo@colorado.edu; fax: 303/492-0439.
Workshops for Small-Scale Chemistry
The Center for Science, Mathematics and
Technology Education at Colorado State University announces two
workshop programs for summer 1999.
Interested community college faculty are invited to
apply for the Small-Scale Chemistry for Pollution
Prevention Summer Institute, June 7-18, 1999. The Institute
features hands-on training in small-scale chemistry laboratory
techniques. Travel to Fort Collins, CO, lodging, per diem,
and classroom/laboratory materials are funded for selected
participants with a grant from the U.S. Environmental
Protection Agency in collaboration with the Partnership for
Environmental Technology Education (PETE). For more information
contact Barry Carroll by email:
barry_carroll@csmate.colostate.edu; phone: 970/491-1700, or access
http://www.csmate.colostate.edu/Programs/PETE_Page.html.
Interested high school teachers are invited to
apply for two one-week workshops in Small-Scale Chemistry
Laboratory for the Regular Chemistry Course (June 21-25,
1999) and Small-Scale Chemistry Laboratory for Advanced
Placement Chemistry (June 28-July 2, 1999). The
workshops feature hands-on training in small-scale chemistry
laboratory techniques. Classroom/laboratory materials, books, and
two graduate credits are included in the $395 fee for each
course. For more information contact Courtney Butler by
email: courtney@ csmate.colostate.edu, phone:
970/491-1700, or access
http://www.csmate.colostate.edu/.
16th BCCE: Call for Suggestions
The 16th Biennial Conference on Chemical
Education will be held at the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor
from July 30-August 3, 2000. Information about the
conference is posted on the World Wide Web at
www.umich.edu/~bcce or may be obtained from the following persons.
General Chair: Seyhan Ege; phone: 734/764-7340; fax:
734/647-4865; email: snege@umich.edu. Program Chair:
Brian Coppola; phone: 734/764-7329; email:
bcoppola@umich.edu. Workshop Coordinator: Evelyn Jackson; phone:
517/355-9715 ext.204; email:
ejackson@argus.cem.msu.edu.
Massachusetts State Science Fair
The 50th Massachusetts State Science Fair will
take place April 30 and May 1, 1999. To celebrate the
anniversary, we plan to hold a gathering of all Fair
alumni/alumnae. Thus we are trying to contact all persons who have ever
exhibited science projects at this state-wide high school Fair
that has been held each year at the Massachusetts Institute of
Technology. Anyone who has exhibited a science project at
the State Fair should send their name, present address, the
name of the school they were attending when participating in
the Fair, and the date(s) they exhibited to the Fair office:
Massachusetts State Science Fair, 45 Howlands Lane, Kingston,
MA 02364-1637. If there are questions, contact Micheline
M. Mathews-Roth, M.D., the chair of the alumni/alumnae
committee, by phone at 617/525-2249.
Call for Proposals, EDUCAUSE '99
Celebrating New Beginnings is the title of
the EDUCAUSE '99 annual conference, to be held October
26-29, 1999, in Long Beach, California. The conference will
be a celebration of new beginnings and a forum to shape and
define our agenda for the 21st century. This is a new
association focused on enabling information technology to
shape the nature of teaching, learning, scholarship, research,
and institutional management and invite you to participate.
At this first EDUCAUSE annual conference, we will
identify the opportunities, address the issues, and celebrate the
potential for transforming education through information
technology; we will bring together information resource
professionals to participate in a diverse, comprehensive,
carefully focused program with many opportunities for interactive
and one-on-one communication. The conference has five
tracks with each track having five focus areas: technical
infrastructure; planning and strategy; service delivery; applications
and best practices; and management and organization.
Speakers at the general session include Colin Powell, retired
chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff; Rita Colwell, director of the
National Science Foundation; and Barry Munitz, president
of the J. Paul Getty Trust. For more information visit the
conference WWW site at
http://www.educause.edu/conference/e99.
Proposal Deadlines
National Science Foundation
Division of Undergraduate Education (DUE)
- Course, Curriculum, and Laboratory
Improvement (CCLI) June 7, 1999
- NSF Collaboratives for Excellence in Teacher
Preparation (CETP)
Preliminary proposals, Track 1 May 1, 1999
Formal proposals, Track 1 September 1, 1999
- DUE online 1999 guidelines, NSF 99-53
available at http://www.nsf.gov/cgi-bin/getpub?nsf9953
For further information about NSF DUE programs
consult the DUE Web site at
http://www.ehr.nsf.gov/EHR/DUE/start.htm or contact the DUE Information Center;
phone: 703/306-1666; email:
undergrad@nsf.gov.
The Camille and Henry Dreyfus Foundation, Inc.
- Camille Dreyfus Teacher-Scholar Awards Program:
November 16, 1998
- Henry Dreyfus Teacher-Scholar Awards Program:
July 1, 1999
- New Faculty Awards Program: May 14, 1999
- Faculty Start-up Grants for Undergraduate
Institutions:
May 14, 1999
- Scholar/Fellow Program for Undergraduate
Institutions:
July 1, 1999
- Special Grant Program in the Chemical Sciences:
July 15, 1999
- Postdoctoral Program in Environmental
Chemistry:
February 26, 1999
Further information may be obtained from The
Camille and Henry Dreyfus Foundation, Inc., 555 Madison
Avenue, Suite 1305, New York, NY 10022; phone:
212/753-1760; email: admin@dreyfus.org;
www: http://www.dreyfus.org/
Research Corporation
- Cottrell College Science Awards: May 15 and
November 15
- Cottrell Scholars: First regular business day in September
- Partners in Science: December 1 (the final year for
this program is summer 1999)
- Research Opportunity Awards: May 1 and October 1
- Research Innovation Awards: May 1
Further information may be obtained from Research
Corporation, 101 North Wilmot Road, Suite 250, Tucson,
AZ 85711-3332; phone: 520/571-1111; fax:
520/571-1119; email: awards@rescorp.org;
www: http://www.rescorp.org
Virtual Conference on Molecular Simulation
The journal Molecular
Simulation is sponsoring a virtual conference on the latest applications and techniques in
the field, to be held April 19-May 4, 1999. Applications
and Methodology of Molecular Simulation in the Physical
and Biological Sciences will bring together experts in a wide
range of disciplines encompassed within the physical and
biological sciences. An important aim of the meeting is to
foster cross fertilization of ideas, algorithms, and applications
between them. Sessions will include papers on topics in
physics, chemistry, materials science, biology, and
pharmacology. Comment and discussion will be encouraged and the
resulting material will be edited and form part of the
proceedings. The format of the virtual conference will be formal
sessions with invited and contributed papers, posters and
subsequent interactive discussions with authors, where comment and
criticism will be sought on the formal lectures (along the
lines of a Faraday Discussion). During the conference all
material will be accessible at the conference Web site,
http://molsim.vei.co.uk/ and accepted papers will be published
after the end of the conference (following refereeing and
editing) in Molecular Simulation. To register, fill in the form at
http://molsim.vei.co.uk/register/index.html.
Smallscale and Microscale Chemistry
This is a call for presenters and participants to the
150th 2YC3 conference, November 5-6, 1999 in Fort Smith,
Arkansas. The theme of this conference is "Smallscale
and Microscale Chemistry-Steps into the 21st Century"
and considers techniques, the escalating cost of chemicals,
and their disposal. Environmental concerns are also topics
that need to be addressed if this laboratory science will teach
an awareness of man's responsibility to the environment.
Please send abstracts for paper and poster presentations or
workshop proposals to Thomas R. Clark at the address
below. Westark College is committed to supporting your
participation and will present a enthusiastic program. Additional
assistance can be obtained from Thomas R. Clark,
Department of Chemistry, Westark College, Fort Smith, AR
72913; phone: 501/788-7623; fax: 501/788-7612;
email: tclark@systema.westark.edu.
Information Requested from AP Chemistry Teachers in Intensive Scheduling
A chemistry teacher in western Pennsylvania who
is working on her Master's thesis, "The Impact of
Intensive Scheduling on Student Achievement in Chemistry", is
seeking pre- and post-Block Scheduling AP Chemistry
Exam Scores. Data from Block, A/B Rotational, and
Copernican schedules is of particular interest. Please send comments
and scores to Chris Ann Slye, 1200 Tenth Avenue, Irwin,
PA 15642; email: cabst71@pitt.edu; phone: 724/861-0250.
A Great Student Award!
Spring is award season, and a subscription to the
Journal has lasting value as well as a reasonable price.
We have personalized subscription award certificates and
accompanying sample issues, ready for presentation.
Whether it is one subscription to an outstanding student or 50 to each
of this year's graduates in an ACS Local Section, we stand ready to help.
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