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Chemical Concepts Corporation:
Ann Arbor, MI, 1997. $89.00, $69.00 (education),
$29.95 (student).
CHEMiCALC is a thoughtfully designed
software package developed for use by high school and
general chemistry students, who will benefit from the personal
tutor mode that helps to guide them through unit
conversion, empirical formula, molecular weight, reaction
stoichiometry, and solution stoichiometry calculations. The program
might also be useful, however, in any environment in
which practicing chemists or chemical technicians are faced
with repetitive calculations of this nature.
The program comes with more than 100
problems, divided into four directories, ranging from simple
one-step unit conversions to chemical reaction stoichiometry
problems. Additional problems can be added using the same
WorkPad interface that the students see when they use this software
in the calculator mode. Problems can be added using a
fill-in-the-blank mode or by entering the text of the problem.
The real power of the program lies in its ability to
display calculations so that a factor-label approach can be used
to check for appropriate unit cancellation and the
feedback provided to the student, for example, "Incorrect", "You
are within ± 15%", or "You are an order of magnitude away
from the answer." Instructors can also customize feedback
messages for specific problems. Use of the factor-label approach
to calculations can be facilitated by having the units
displayed as colored tiles so that the same unit has to have the same
color.
Miles Davis was fond of noting that jazz
musicians should be judged on the notes they don't play. In a
similar vein, the most important feature of this program is what
it doesn't do. It never performs the calculation or cancels
the appropriate units for the student. The student must
always enter a number and a unit in the answer box before the
answer is evaluated. If the student needs help, hints and
stepwise "show me" data entries are available from the personal
tutor. But the hints and helps do not complete the calculation for
the student, who must eventually return to the calculator mode.
The CHEMiCALC software does a good job of
utilizing the Windows environment. Tool-windows are used to
enter chemical elements, molecular formulas, numbers,
calculated results, and units in problem-solving exercises or
problem generation. Tools include a pair of calculators, an
expandable periodic table, a number keypad, and a unit scrolling
keypad. One calculator is used to calculate numerical answers
only. The second calculator, like the "stack" calculator found
in HP calculators, uses RPN logic. It also displays units and
can interpret chemical formulas in terms of their
molecular weights. For example, it can interpret the entry
"C6H12O6" as 180.158 g/mol, which is why this program might be
useful for practicing chemists and chemical technicians.
In addition to the calculator and personal tutor
modes described above, the CHEMiCALC program provides
other modes. An elemental properties mode allows one to
examine trends in periodic properties, which can be graphed in
either two or three dimensions. Different elements, families,
or periods can be chosen by simply clicking on a small
periodic table and then returning to the element mode window.
Three-dimensional periodic tables can be created by combining
one of the physical properties of the elements with the
classic periodic table and then rotating the table by up to 360°
or adjusting the perspective by up to 90°. There is also a
bond-pair mode, which displays the calculation of the bond
length, electronegativity difference, and degree of
covalent/ionic character of two elements chosen by the user.
There are a variety of features that make
CHEMiCALC easy to use, such as the divisor bar in the WorkPad,
which inverts fractions in a calculation. Other features make the
program useful to students, such as the specific and
informative feedback generated when it checks answers, or to
instructors, who have access to a "Learning Curve Monitor" that
can monitor students' efforts. On a 15-inch monitor, it is
easy to open so many windows that they overlap enough to
be cumbersome, but this problem is easily solved by closing
one or more of them.
The CHEMiCALC program is accompanied by a
personal tutor manual designed to help the user who is unfamiliar
with the program. For this review, however, we followed the
well-established tradition of playing with the program
without reading the user's manual. Finding data from the mode
windows and entering data from the tool windows was easy,
but performing calculations on the WorkPad required a
brief consultation of the manual and online help. By the time
this review appears, the version of CHEMiCALC that will
be shipped will have the manuals available in a
semi-interactive form of online help.
Discussion of this program among several groups
of chemistry teachers who had not seen the software
contained dire predictions of the fate of the nation if its youth
have access to a program that does stoichiometry calculations
for them. But that is not what this program does. This
program does nothing more than what so many of us have done
so often in the past, checking students' answers to see if they
are right (or wrong) and providing hints about what
they might have done wrong in setting up a problem. If you
would like to provide access to a computer program that does
this, freeing your time to work with students on their
conceptual understanding of chemistry, or if you would like a
computer program that could be used in class to demonstrate
how calculations of this nature are done, you might want to
look into the CHEMiCALC software.
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