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"I'm a high school teacher. I don't have time to
sift through all of JCE to find what I need. I don't have
enough time as it is!"
If you need to find things in a hurry, go to JCE
HS CLIC, the JCE High School Chemed Learning
Information Center,
http://JChemEd.chem.wisc.edu/HS/.
You will find good solid, reliable information, and you will find it fast. CLIC
is open 24 hours every day, all over the world.
What You Will Find at JCE CLIC
We know teachers are pressed for time. During the
few minutes between classes or at the end of the day,
information needs to be found very quickly. Perhaps you are
looking for a demo that illustrates electrochemistry using Cu,
Mg, orange juice, and a clock; or a student activity on
chromatography that is ready to copy and hand out; or a video
to illustrate the action of aqua regia on gold, because you
can't use aqua regia and can't afford gold. You can find each
of these quickly at CLIC.
The Journal has always provided lots of articles
designed with high school teachers in mind. What the new JCE
HS CLIC does is collect the recent materials at one address
on JCE Online, making it quicker and easier for you to find
them. Information has been gathered from both print and
online versions of the Journal, from JCE
Software, and from JCE Internet. It is organized as shown at the bottom of the page.
Getting Access to Information
You have located something that interests you,
perhaps a list of tested demonstrations that pertain to consumer
chemistry. Now it is time to get it. JCE subscribers
(individuals and libraries) can read, download, and print the full
versions of the articles as well as all supplemental materials,
including student handouts and instructor's notes. You will
need the username and password that are on the mailing label
that comes with your Journaleach month.
JCE HS CLIC home page:
http://JChemEd.chem.wisc.edu/HS/
Your Suggestions, Please
Our plans for JCE HS CLIC do not end with what
you find now. Other resources and features will be added
that will facilitate sharing ideas with other high school
teachers. We also expect to develop additional ways of finding,
categorizing, and bringing to your attention the wealth of
information that is JCE. If you have suggestions for
making CLIC more useful, just send them to
jceonline@chem.wisc.edu
and put "CLIC" in the subject field.
Visit CLIC and See...
Especially for High School
Teachers. The high school editor's monthly columns highlight articles in each issue of
JCE and also report news and announcements.
Classroom Activities. Student activities use readily
available, inexpensive materials. Activities are arranged by title and by
topic; you can copy them for your class to use.
Tested Demonstrations. If you are looking for a cool
demonstration, one that has been tested and works, we have a
wide variety to choose from. They are arranged by topic on a
pull-down list.
Features. Several of our feature columns are tailored for
high school teachers (Applications and Analogies, Second Year
and AP Chemistry, and others).
Laboratory Activities. We have collected, by topic, those
that we think are of interest.
JCE Software.
Here is a shortcut to our peer-reviewed
instructional software and video that is best suited for the high
school classroom. Periodic Table Live!, General Chemistry
Collection, and the Chemistry Comes Alive! series will be especially useful.
JCE Internet. Another direct linethis time to
animations, video, online features (Conceptual Questions and
Challenge Problems, Book and Equipment Guides), and useful Web sites.
Articles of Interest. General articles relevant to high
school chemistry are grouped here, by topic.
JCE Index. If you are still looking, then click here. You can
search the index to the entire Journal (since 1924).
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