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Brooks/Cole: Pacific Grove, CA, 2001. 229 pp, index.
ISBN 0-534-37981-8. Paper, $38.95.
Organic Laboratory Techniques is not a stand-alone lab
text. If you want to provide a single laboratory textbook for
your students, including experiments, you should use one of
the many integrated laboratory texts in existence; most of
them provide the same technical information. My favorite
is Lehman's Operational Organic Chemistry.
Organic Laboratory Techniques is not a guide for
someone running a laboratory, whether a research lab or a teaching
lab. For that, I recommend Loewenthal's A Guide for
the Perplexed Organic Experimentalist.
Organic Laboratory Techniques is not a chatty discussion
of laboratory pitfalls, dangers to the student's grade,
and common mistakes made by beginners. Instead, you
want Zubrick's The Organic Chem Lab Survival
Manual.
Organic Laboratory Techniques is intended as a manual
for the beginner, with enough information to make it
useful for students in graduate school and beyond. It teaches
basic techniques of laboratory manipulation and analysis, with
a little of the theory of each. Because it is in direct
competition with Zubrick's text, Organic Laboratory
Techniques consciously provides more depth in certain areas, such
as toxicological information and common laboratory
calculations, on which Zubrick is weak. Fessenden, Fessenden,
and Feist integrate more theory with their descriptions
of techniques and provide more detail than Zubrick on
more different types of apparatus. This is why Organic
Laboratory Techniques is useful for graduate students and
advanced undergraduates.
Organic Laboratory Techniques does
not have detailed discussions of how to set up laboratory apparatus,
with compilations of the most common mistakes. It would
be good to see, for example, a discussion of how to set
up glassware for a simple distillation, including the order
of assembly, how to clamp the glassware in place, and what
to do with that pesky thermometer adapter--Zubrick has all
of the above. I have seen students make every mistake in
the book (Zubrick's book), but Fessenden et al. don't
discuss any of them. This is why Organic Laboratory
Techniques is less useful for undergraduate students, especially
for beginners who have never touched jointware or done
a recrystallization before.
If I had graduate students, I'd require them to own
this text; I know they'd use it often. I wish I'd had a copy
when I was in graduate school. But for lower-level
undergraduates, Fessenden et al. may not be as appropriate. I asked
a few of my introductory organic chemistry students
to compare Zubrick's The Organic Chem Lab Survival
Manual, which I've been having them buy, with
Fessenden, Fessenden and Feist's Organic Laboratory
Techniques. They preferred Zubrick, finding it more readable and with
more information that is useful on their level.
Organic Laboratory Techniques is--I repeat--not for use as
a laboratory textbook unless you provide your student
with photocopied or modular experiments or require them
to find procedures in the chemical literature. It should
be excellent for advanced lab courses of the latter type;
it provides enough information for students who have seen
the equipment before, as well as discussions of theory
and equipment appropriate to a more advanced level. But I
do not recommend this text for the rank beginner.
Organic Laboratory Techniques and The Organic Chem Lab
Survival Manual are competing texts that are superficially
similar, but are not appropriate for the same students or
courses; which is appropriate for your course you must decide
for yourself.
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