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An important part of this Journal is its feature columns. Some appear in every issue whereas others appear at much longer intervals, but each provides
useful information about a specific aspect of chemical education. Each editor of a feature column has been asked to provide a statement outlining the mission and goals of the column and the types of manuscript that should be submitted. These statements appear below, except for High School features. (Because of the changeover of High School editors, the mission statements for High School features will appear in a subsequent issue.)
Please read these statements and consider whether a manuscript you may submit would be appropriate for one of the feature columns. If so, indicate this in the cover letter with your manuscript, but submit the manuscript to the editorial office in Wisconsin, not to the feature editor. If you have an idea for a manuscript, do communicate directly with the appropriate feature editor in advance. In many cases feature editors can help you to produce a more effective, publishable paper.
If you are interested in developing a new feature column, please write a summary of your idea in one page or less and send it to the Journal editor. Your summary should be similar to the mission statements below. Whenever a new feature is added, its mission statement will be published along with the first feature article. The editor and the feature editors are interested in your
ideas and suggestions regarding any of the feature columns. Please communicate them to us.
The Chemical Information Instructor
Arleen N. Somerville
Carlson Library, University of Rochester
Rochester, NY 14627-0236
Phone: 716/275-4465; FAX: 716/473-1712
Email: ansv@dbv.cc.rochester.edu
This column provides instructors with practical information on a wide range of topics related to teaching information-searching skills to undergraduates,
graduate students, and other researchers. Although it is oriented towards academic situations, all chemists can benefit from this material. Information is provided in print, on the Web via JCE Online. Topics include, but are
not limited to:
·courses: semester, short courses
·workshops
·integration of information instruction into
one or more courses
·integration of WWW sources into instruction
·specific types of information: e.g.,
inorganic chemistry, organic reactions, polymers,
bioorganic chemistry
·specific types of materials: e.g., patents,
journal articles
·specific sources and databases: e.g.,
Science Citation index, Chemical Abstracts
·specific types of searches: e.g., structure,
reaction, citation indexing
·ways to stay current on a topic
·teaching techniques: e.g., interactive teaching
Contributions aim to provide information needed
by readers to replicate similar experiences in their
institutions. Information includes description of the
instruction; staffing; costs involved and how resolved;
logistic - shardware, software, scheduling; practice questions
and exam questions; how this instruction contributed to
the overall instruction program; and any other
information the author thinks other instructors would find
valuable. The Editor welcomes contributions by potential
authors and by all readers about topics they would like to
see discussed in the column. Potential authors are urged
to contact the editor and submit an early draft version
before completing a paper and submitting it to the
editorial office in Wisconsin.
Computer Bulletin Board
Steven D. Gammon, Coordinator of General Chemistry
Department of Chemistry, University of Idaho
Moscow, ID 83844
Phone: 208/885-6864; FAX: 208/885-6173
Email: gammon@osprey.csrv.uidaho.edu
As we continue to grow into the age of computer-based information and instruction, I am excited to be
the new editor of the "Computer Bulletin Board" feature.
As many of you are probably aware, this feature has
been focused on the print publication of articles that
describe innovative uses of computer software in the teaching
of chemistry. Articles that have appeared in the past
have included spreadsheet templates, descriptions and
examples of the instructional use of symbolic
processors and molecular modeling software, and examples of
using commercial software in the lab.
Availability of computers in computer rooms,
lecture halls, laboratories, and student dorm rooms has
raised the potential for the use of computers in chemistry
instruction to its highest point ever. Please share the
results of your research and experiences. If you are
using computers and commercial software in your
classroom, lab, or lecture hall in a new and innovative way, I
encourage you to submit an article. I am interested in
submissions from the K-12 community, the two-year
college community, and the college/university community.
I encourage you to become involved in
discussions about how we can best publish articles in an
electronic format. Electronic publication has advantages over
the current print medium: speed of publication and wide
dissemination to audiences who might not otherwise be
exposed to the journal. In an electronic format, we also
have the potential to publish in a manner that will allow
readers to interact with the author. These interactions
will hopefully stimulate both the author and readers to
use and improve upon what has already been done. My
ultimate goal in this section of the
Journal is to provide you, the reader, with useful and timely information about
the use of computers and computer software in
chemistry instruction. I welcome any comments and
suggestions that you may have so that I may better reach this goal.
Concepts in Biochemistry
William M. Scovell
Department of Chemistry, Bowling Green State University
Bowling Green, OH 43403-0213
Phone: 419/372-2031; FAX: 419/372-9809
The aim of this feature is to present articles
helpful to teachers and students of biochemistry and/or
introductory courses directed toward the allied health
professionals. Certain articles may also be useful to
instructors in the "main stream" freshman chemistry
courses in exemplifying principles in which the examples are
directed toward biochemistry. The articles are of
three types.
1. Minireview, on a topic in which current
textbooks do not present up-to-date or thorough coverage. The
level of writing should enable the article to serve as a
bridge from current textbook coverage to critically reading
research journals. Articles should briefly review
(1-2 pages) background material or focused concepts as
typically covered in current textbooks and then develop
the concepts and experimental strategies used in
current research to answer one or more important questions
in the area.
The level should be approximately that found in
Trends in Biochemical Sciences (TIBS). Since it is
impossible for even outstanding teachers and active
researchers to keep up with areas outside their
specialty, it will be important to clearly define the important
questions being addressed in the area. In addition,
review articles that bridge biochemistry and other areas,
such as bioorganic chemistry or physical biochemistry,
are encouraged. Reviews should not exceed 6
Journal pages, including figures, tables, and references. This
translates to 12-18 pages of double-spaced manuscript.
2. Concept Capsule, on a focused concept,
such as the characteristics of a biomacromolecule, history
of a development, or definitions of terms that may be
often misunderstood or misused. The depth of the
article should be at least that found in standard textbooks.
If coverage is equivalent to the level of most texts, new
approaches to introducing this material, which have
been successfully used to bring better understanding to a
difficulty concept, are necessary. Articles should be 3
Journal pages or less.
3. Lab Notebook, on modern
instrumentation, classroom demonstrations, laboratory techniques, or
experiments that have been tried and tested.
Articles should be 3 Journal pages or less. In the first two
types of articles, 6-10 references are usually appropriate,
with 2-3 referring to background sections in current
textbooks or articles in nonspecialist magazines or journals
(Scientific American, TIBS, or the like), 2-3 minireviews
or general reviews (Cell, Nature, Annual Reviews of
Biochemistry) and 2-3 original research articles.
Curricular Change Digests
Baird W. Lloyd
Center for Chemical Education
Miami University Middletown
4200 East University Boulevard
Middletown, OH 45042-3497
Phone: 513/727-3292; FAX: 513/727-3367
Email: lloydbw@muohio.edu
Curricular Change Digests is an occasional
column that will appear in the Chemical Education Today
section of the Journal. The goal of the column is to
provide succinct descriptions of innovative ideas that
demonstrate successful curricular change in college
chemistry courses for science majors. These changes might
include new instructional strategies, variations in
arrangement or sequencing of content, and novel applications or
adaptations of ideas from other fields. They need not
be finished products nor thoroughly tested and
evaluated because the purpose of the descriptions is to show
readers the wide variety of possibilities available in
curricular change, to inspire them to try innovations of
their own, and to promote interactions among people who
are trying related innovations. The maximum length for
a contribution is one Journal page (about 1000
words). What appears in the printed Journal should describe
the innovation so that readers can decide whether it is
of interest. Authors may, if they choose, put onto JCE:
Internet additional supporting documentation, the
detailed rationale for change, and any other detailed
material they wish to share with Journal readers who might
like to implement the change in their own programs.
Such material should be submitted along with the
one-journal-page summary.
Discovering
Paul and Brenda H. Cohen
Chemistry Department,The College of New Jersey
CN 4700, Trenton, NJ 08650-4700
Phone: 609-771-3174; 609/771-2434
FAX: 609/771-3167
Email: cohenp@trenton.edu
The Discovering column provides division members and those who accompany members to the ACS
national meetings with a description of the convention
city and a list of science-related sites in the region of
the meeting. This column has several goals: (i) induce
more members to attend the national meeting, (ii)
provide meeting attendees with a list of interesting sites
within easy reach of the convention city, (iii) provide
session attendees with information about brief escapes from
the meeting, and (iv) provide members and those
accompanying them with a list of places to visit before or
after the meeting. The column appears in two parts; in
the Journal there is an introduction to the convention
city, and in the Division's Newsletter is a more complete
description of the city and a list of sites with a
description of each.
Exam Question Exchange
John J. Alexander
Department of Chemistry, University of Cincinnati
P.O. Box 221-0172, Cincinnati, OH 45221-0172
Phone: 513/556-9249; FAX: 513/556-9239
Email: john.j.alexander@uc.edu
Current trends in chemical education are
beginning to emphasize a wider range of options for assessing
student learning than the traditional hour exam or
final exam containing a selection of problems to work. A
major focus is on the desirability of posing challenges
that will prompt students to realistically assess their
own progress in a nongraded situation. In particular,
students' grasp of chemical concepts (as contrasted with
the ability to work numerical problems) has begun to
assume larger importance. Questions revolving around
concepts can help students sharpen their mental models of
nature. (A more thorough discussion of the rationale
behind such questions as well as a large selection of
questions is provided by the Web site Conceptest
(http://www.chem.wisc.edu/~concept) maintained by Arthur B.
Ellis.) Likewise, questions that can induce
productive discussion among students are desirable, because
they can facilitate understanding and foster skills in
communal problem solving. These must be carefully
formulated from both the point of eliciting some student interest
and of relying on the extent of chemical knowledge that
students could reasonably be expected to possess.
Questions posed in novel formats such as by videotape or
making use of computer technology are also desirable,
inasmuch as they can increase student involvement and
interest. A particularly interesting subclass of these is
questions that involve hands-on, interactive participation on
the part of students.
In light of these developments, we are expanding
the scope of Exam Question Exchange to include not
only the more traditional types of questions that we have
ordinarily published but also concept questions,
discussion questions, and questions posed in novel format as
described above. To reflect this change, we need a
new name for the column. Readers are invited to submit
their suggestions to the column editor at the address
above by January 31, 1997. The author of the winning
name will receive a free one-year subscription to the
Journal.
Experiential, Cooperative, and Study Abroad Education
Geoffrey Davies
Chemistry Department, Northeastern University
Boston, MA 02115
Phone: 617/373-2834; FAX: 617/373-8795
Email: gdavies@lynx.neu.edu
Jiwon Kim
American Chemical Society, Education Division
1155 Sixteenth Street, NW, Washington, DC 20036
Phone: 202/872-6176
Email: jwk@acs.org
This feature column describes efforts by
chemistry departments, colleges, government agencies, and
industry to organize and maintain programs that help
students to sharpen their skills and improve their
prospects through productive off-campus internships, paid
cooperative work assignments, and study abroad. Its aim
is to encourage and enhance such programs through
communication of effective and successful examples.
The Microscale Laboratory
Arden P. Zipp
Department of Chemistry, SUNY
Cortland, NY 13045
Phone: 607/753-2905; FAX: 607/753-2927
Email: zipp@snycorva.cortland.edu
The goal of The Microscale Laboratory column is
to disseminate information about microscale
laboratory techniques and the advantages they afford for
teachers and students at all levels of chemistry instruction.
The column solicits manuscripts that present innovative
microscale experiments, modify existing experiments to
the microscale, offer new or modified microscale
equipment, or addres¡s other items of interest to those who are
using or planning to use microscale experiments.
NSF Highlights
Curtis T. Sears, Jr.
Department of Chemistry, Georgia State University
University Plaza, Atlanta, GA 28741
Phone: 404/651-4954; FAX: 404/651-1416
Email: chects@panther.gsu.edu
The purpose of NSF Highlights is to inform
college faculty of innovations in both undergraduate
lectures and laboratories as identified by their peers who
serve as reviewers for the NSF Division of
Undergraduate Education. The column consists of invited papers
that are selected based on the proposal abstracts and the
relative reviewers' rank among the awards made in
that year's competition. The intent is both brief and rapid
dissemination of information. Descriptions in Highlights
do not preclude later publication of a complete
description in a full-length article in the
Journal or elsewhere.
Overhead Projector Demonstrations
Doris Kolb
Department of Chemistry, Bradley University
Peoria, IL 61625
Phone: 319/677-3029; FAX: 309/677-3023
Email: dkkolb@bumail.bradley.edu
The Overhead Projector Demonstrations column solicits and publishes manuscripts about classroom
demonstrations that can be shown on the stage of a
standard type overhead projector. The demonstrations
may relate to any aspect of chemical education. The
articles should be relatively short, giving explicit directions
for carrying out the demonstrations and including
pertinent references when appropriate. If a demonstration
requires a projector that has been modified in some way, the
modification should be carefully described.
Safety Tips
Tim Champion
Department of Chemistry & Physics
Johnson C. Smith University, Charlotte, NC 28216
Phone: 704/378-1155; FAX: 704/378-1213
Email: tchampio@uncc.edu
The purpose of the Safety Tips column is to
improve the "safeness" of chemical instruction at all levels.
Safeness includes awareness of, avoidance of, and
appropriate responses to all health hazards encountered in
the process of chemical education. To this end, this
column will include articles concerning:
·health hazards (chemical, physical,
electrical)especially newly recognized hazards in
common instructional practices
·safety education for faculty and students
·reviews of safety for beginning teachers
·suggestions for helpful practices to
improve safety (warning methods, documentation
methods, inventory and waste management methods, modifications to improve the safeness of
common procedures)
·new regulations related to safety
Teaching with Technology (formerly Computer Series)
James P. Birk
Department of Chemistry, Arizona State University
Box 871604, Tempe, AZ 85287-1604
Phone: 602/965-3129; FAX: 602/965-2747
Email: Jbirk@asu.edu
In classrooms and laboratories throughout the world, rapidly changing technology is changing the
face of education in chemistry. This column deals with
educational changes that can result from technological
developments, especially the evolution of interactive
education based on multimedia. Such education may
involve the use of technology in a variety of settings, from
the traditional lecture hall or laboratory to virtual or
distributed classrooms. Technology may be used to
communicate with students who are off-campus, perhaps
in other states or countries. To bring these changes into
effect, questions such as the following have to be
addressed. What tools are being used to develop
new courseware? What software is effective in
enhancing learning? What computer systems and other
hardware can be used to develop an effective learning
environment? What modifications are needed in the
classroom environment? How are distributed learning
systems changing as multimedia and communications
technology change? We are soliciting manuscripts that
address these and related questions. Manuscripts that
describe locally produced software or routine uses of software
are not appropriate to this column. Software, along with
descriptions of its use, should be submitted to JCE:
Software; descriptions of uses of commercial software
should be submitted to the Computer Bulletin Board.
Tested Demonstrations
Ed Vitz
Kutztown University, Kutztown, PA 19530
Phone: 610/683-4443; FAX: 610/683-1352
Email: vitz@kutztown.edu
Demonstrations are critical for conveying the
meaning of science. Demonstrations make science much
more exciting to students at all levels and they attract
scientific minds to chemistry. It is a happy coincidence
that demonstrations are also fun to do, and we look
forward to hearing from all teachers who discover effective
ways to demonstrate the excitement of chemistry.
The Tested Demonstrations column aims to help teachers at all levels to make effective use of
demonstrations by providing (i) complete, accurate instructions,
(ii) a list of convenient sources for all equipment and
supplies, (iii) brief explanations of the chemistry
involved, and (iv) a description of how a demonstration has
proven useful in teaching. To expand the traditional purview
of demonstrations we actively seek demonstrations in
biochemistry, instrumental analysis, environmental
chemistry, materials science, food and textile chemistry,
and other areas of applied chemistry.
Submitted manuscripts should be complete, so
that no other information is necessary for a teacher to
present the demonstration. The demonstrations will be
checked to make certain that they work as described.
Manuscripts should include references that lead the
interested reader to expanded treatments of the subject, and
citations of previous demonstrations on the same or a
closely related topic. Authors should check available
compendia including those by Shakhashiri (1), Gilbert
(2), and Ealy (3), other sources listed in Katz's recent
bibliography (4), and the electronic index to the
Journal (5). Many excellent new demonstrations are derived from
classics, but reference must be made to previous work.
Tested Demonstrations should be live. Educators argue forcibly against replacing educational
laboratory experiences with "dry" labs, and Tested
Demonstrations will continue to focus on live, not "dry",
demonstrations. Computer simulations, videos, and other forms of
multimedia demonstrations, which provide a useful
supplement to the real thing, should be submitted to the
Computer Bulletin Board, JCE: Software, or Teaching
with Technology.
1. Shakhashiri, B. Z. Chemical Demonstrations; University of Wisconsin: Madison, 1983-1992; Vols. 1-4.
2. Gilbert, G., et al. Tested Demonstrations in Chemistry; Dept. of Chemistry, Denison University, Granville, OH, 1994.
3. Ealy, J. B.; Ealy, J. L. Visualizing Chemistry; American Chemical Society: Washington, DC, 1995.
4. Katz, D. A. Science Demonstrations, Experiments, and Resources; J. Chem. Educ. 1991,
68, 235-244.
5. Schatz, P. F.; Jacobsen, J. J. Computerized Index, Journal of
Chemical Education, JCE: Software;
1993, Special issue 5-M (Macintosh) or 5-W (Windows).
Topics in Chemical Instrumentation
Howard A. Strobel
Department of Chemistry
Paul M. Gross Chemical Laboratory
Box 90354, Duke University, Durham, NC 27708-0364
Phone: 919/660-1500; FAX: 919/660-1605
Email: strobel@chem.duke.edu
The mission of the feature is to provide a forum
for chemistry faculty to describe:
1. major instrumental techniques and accompanying instrumentation with which they have developed
special experience;
2. classroom adaptations of instrumental
techniques that enhance the laboratory experience of students in
a chemistry course at the sophomore level or above;
3. exposure to new analytical techniques and
instrumentation that have reached a substantial level of
acceptance.
The following mission statement is for a feature
column that appears in JCE Internet.
Chemical Education Resource Shelf
Hal Harris
Dept. of Chemistry, University of Missouri - St. Louis
St. Louis, MO 63121
Phone: 314/516-5344; FAX: 314/516-5342
Email: harris@umsl.edu
The Chemical Education Resource Shelf provides
an up-to-date, comprehensive listing of books, journals,
computer software, video, films, and other media that
are potentially of use to chemical educators. For books,
the author, title, edition, publisher, year of publication,
number of pages, ISBN, and list prices are listed. For
software, the title, a brief description, author, distributor,
and price are provided. Contact with publishers is
facilitated by a compilation of their addresses, phone numbers,
FAX numbers, email addresses, and URLs. Because
the Chemical Education Resource Shelf is part of JCE:
Internet and is made available through the World
Wide Web, the capabilities of the medium allow users to
explore, through hyperlinks, more detailed descriptions
of any items that publishers have included in their
Web pages. The Chemical Education Resource Shelf
provides the book and software data published in the
Journal as the Book Buyers Guide.
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