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News from Journal House
Conceptual Questions and Challenge Problems
Many readers are trying to modify the way they
teach and in so doing are trying to write new types of
questions and problems. The Journal has a new online resource,
the JCE Internet Conceptual Questions and Challenge
Problems Web site,
http://jchemed.chem.wisc.edu/JCEWWW/Resources/CQandChP/index.html
.
The site is a source of questions and problems that
can be used in teaching and assessing conceptual
understanding and problem solving in chemistry. Here you can find a
library of free-response and multiple-choice conceptual
questions and challenge problems, tips for writing these
questions and problems, and a discussion of types of concept
questions. This site is intended to be a means of sharing conceptual
questions and challenge problems among chemical educators.
It will be as inclusive as possible, and to achieve this
readers need to share their questions and alert the authors to
references or Web sites.
The screen captures shown below should provide a
feeling for what you will find when you visit the site. The
authors, William R. Robinson and Susan C. Nurrenbern,
welcome additions to the library of conceptual questions or
other comments or suggestions. Contact them by email, fax,
or regular mail. William R. Robinson and Susan C.
Nurrenbern, Department of Chemistry, Purdue University, West
Lafayette, IN 47907-1393. Bill: phone: 765/494-5453; fax:
765/494-0239; email: wrrobin@purdue.edu. Sue: phone:
765/494-0823; fax: 765/494-0239; email:
nurrenbe@purdue.edu. fax: 765/494-0239.
1998 Ford Foundation Fellowships
The National Research Council has announced the
recipients of the 1998 fellowships for minority scholars.
Three categories of fellowships were awarded: 50 to
beginning graduate students, 33 to students writing their
dissertations, and 28 to recent Ph.D. recipients. There were about
1,000 applicants. For information about the next competition
contact the Fellowship Office of the National Research
Council, 2101 Constitution Avenue, NW, Washington, DC
20418, via email at infofell@nas.edu, or at
http://fellowships.nas.edu.
1998 Pre-Doctoral Fellows
Rafael Alcala, University of
Wisconsin-Madison, Chemical Engineering
Diego J. Díaz, Cornell University, Analytical Chemistry
Kanya Lynn Henderson, Colorado State
University, Biochemistry
Félix Mario Rivas, State University of New York,
Buffalo, Organic Chemistry
1998 Dissertation Fellows
Kristala Lanett Jones, Arizona State University,
Chemical Engineering
1998 Postdoctoral Fellows
Edgardo Tabión Farinas, Yale University,
Interdisciplinary Chemistry
Data Base of Online Courses
TeleEducation NB, a province-wide distributed
distance learning network in the Canadian province of
New Brunswick, has implemented an international online course database of more
than 9,000 courses. The database includes public and private courses at all levels from
more than 15 countries and includes only those courses that can be completed fully online.
Courses vary from graduate-level
engineering offerings to simple "How to" courses. The database provides access
to courses and programs leading to accredited degrees, diplomas, and certificates.
Professional development and personal interest courses are also included.
Students can access course
information by browsing subject areas or by
searching specific fields. Hotlinks connect
students directly to the delivering institutions. In
the past year, there has been an exponential rise in the number of courses being
offered online, from fewer than 2,000 in January
1998 to more than 10,000 in December 1998. It is
expected that there will be more than 40,000 online courses by
the year 2000. The TeleCampus Online Course Database
provides students with a means of finding information on
courses that meet their needs. The database can be accessed
from TeleCampus at http://telecampus.edu.
Change in the Introductory Chemistry Course,
an Online Course
An online conference, Proposals for Change in the
Introductory Chemistry Course, will take place from
March 29 to April 10, 1999. The conference will be chaired by
James N. Spencer, Chemistry Department, Franklin &
Marshall College, Lancaster, PA 17604;
j_spencer@acad.fandm.edu. While both process and content need to be considered
in making changes, this conference will be limited to a
discussion of content. It will take the approach that if we begin
to examine the current content and how and why certain
topics came to be considered as essential for the course, we
may be able to approach a common curriculum so that the
process of how to best to implement it may then be developed.
Stephen J. Hawkes of Oregon State University
compiled suggestions for the content of general chemistry and
served as leader of the Zero Base Course discussion group for
the Task Force on the General Chemistry Curriculum. The
goal of the zero base approach is a detailed curriculum in
which topics are developed so that students understand the
phenomena considered necessary for the course. This analysis
requires that the principles that should be in the course be
identified, that those not necessary be removed, and perhaps
additional principles be added. This online conference will list more
than 100 proposals compiled from many viewpoints. Proposals
are worded as debatable propositions to engender serious
discussion. After discussion, amendment, deletion, extension,
and some consensus, the proposals will be distributed to the
chemistry community in various forms. Future discussions are
also planned. The CONFCHEM World Wide Web site has
the URL http://www.chem.vt.edu/confchem/.
The March and April session is free to all Internet
users. To subscribe to the CONFCHEM Listserv send the message:
SUBSCRIBE CONFCHEM your-first-and-last-name
to
LISTSERV@CLVM.CLARKSON.EDU
X-ray Structure Solution Manual
Allen Hunter announces the release of the second
edition of his lab manual for introductory diffraction
methods courses. It was written as a step-by-step guide to solving
routine crystal structures for crystallographic novices and is
entitled "Allen Hunter's Youngstown State University
X-ray Structure Analysis Lab Manual: A Beginner's
Introduction". The manual has been developed in an undergraduate
course that enrolls a broad mixture of chemists, engineers,
geologists, and biologists. It is optimized for use with
the SHELXTL suite of programs but should prove useful to
those using other structure solution packages as well. This
edition has been reviewed at twelve sites and will be available for
general use in January 1999. The lab manual is available
without charge as a .pdf file to academic users, provided that
each copy is registered and users inform the author about how
it is used in their teaching. Those interested in obtaining a
copy should contact the author at
adhunter@cc.ysu.edu.
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
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 & 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
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