750 likes | 918 Views
Dr. Jenkins. CHM119. An Introduction to General, Organic, and Biological Chemistry. Lecture 1 1/9-1/11. Syllabus. Instructor : Dr. Sharron Jenkins Phone : 219-785-5206 E-mail : sjenkins@pnc.edu Office location : SWRZ 106 Office Hours : Mon. 1-3pm Tues. 8-11am, 1- 3pm
E N D
Dr. Jenkins CHM119 An Introduction to General, Organic, and Biological Chemistry Lecture 1 1/9-1/11
Syllabus • Instructor: Dr. Sharron Jenkins • Phone: 219-785-5206 • E-mail: sjenkins@pnc.edu • Office location: SWRZ 106 • Office Hours: • Mon. 1-3pm • Tues. 8-11am, 1- 3pm • or by appointment only
Syllabus • Lecture times • Mon. & Wed., 10:00 am - 10:50 am • Lecture Location • SWRZ 239 • Laboratory CHM119L • Fridays, 8:30 am – 11:20 am • Lab Location • SWRZ 325
Syllabus Additional Contact Info: • Lab Technician (Betsy Papka) • 219-785-5218, SWRZ 317 • Biology/Chemistry Office Secretary • 219-785-5298, SWRZ 120
REQUIRED LECTURE TEXT and SUPPLIES • Chemistry: an Introduction to General, Organic and Biochemistry (8th Ed.) K. Timberlake, Benjamin/Cummings (2003) • Chemistry 119: General Chemistry Laboratory Experiments (4th Ed.), L. Unger, PUNC (2003). • Safety Goggles (NOT glasses) • available from the bookstore. • Scientific Calculator with log and scientific notation functions. A graphing calculator is NOT required!
Syllabus • Chemistry 119 is a one-semester survey of general chemistry, organic chemistry, and biochemistry, with an emphasis on applications for the health sciences, particularly nursing.
Syllabus Prerequisites • one year of high school chemistry (or a grade of “C” or better in GNC 088 or CHM 103) • four semesters of high school academic math (including algebra). • SEE YOUR INSTRUCTOR IMMEDIATELY IF YOU DO NOT HAVE THESE PREREQUISITES!
COURSE PHILOSOPHY • Grades are based on performance, not effort. • You are expected to be able to recall and use information from a basic high school level chemistry course (the equivalent of our GNC 088 or CHM 103).
COURSE PHILOSOPHY • Before you drop the course, see me What are you expected to learn? • Use the list of learning objectives at the beginning of each chapter as a guide • The class will consist of • class discussions, text readings, homework problems, quizzes/exams, and a lab (take labs seriously)
ON-LINE SITE Access course information: • WebCT • Log-on using your 1st initial + first 5 letters of your last name + 00. Ex. Sharron Jenkins use password sjenki00. WebCT should be your first and primary source for accessing class information. • Only if WebCT is down • “I” drive under “Jenkins”, find “CHM119 Spring 2006” folder The folder is accessible from on campus only.
ON-LINE SITE • Check the WebCT for announcements, homework, quizzes, assignments, handouts, lectures notes, etc. • Check the site at least one week and before before each class. • You are responsible for obtaining, printing, and completing assignments posted online.
DISABLED STUDENTS • Please notify your instructor as soon as possible. • Contact Jodi James • Disability Services Coordinator • Student Support Services, L-23 • 219-785-5374 • jjames@pnc.edu.
TUTORIALS • During my office hours • You are strongly encouraged to get help as soon as you feel help is needed.
GRADING • The cumulative grade for this course will be based on the following:
THE POINT SYSTEM • Extra credit points are points earned in class for exceptional class participation (points added to quiz/homework) • Extra credit points may be given at the end of the semester (to overall semester average) for exceptional class participation demonstrated during the semester, not exceed 3 percentage points. • Points are given at the instructor’s discretion.
HOMEWORK • In-class assignments homework grade, • can not make up in-class assignments • If you must miss a lecture, you are responsible for obtaining and completing missed work. • Reading assignments should be completed before the subject is covered in class. • Web Companion exercises as you encounter them in the text (omit this statement)
HOMEWORK • Homework posted online on WebCT or given during class. • Check WebCT for due dates • Late assign. will receive a zero. • Missing Class - You are responsible for work missed (WebCT) and timely submission • No Make up
QUIZZES • Given approximately once a week • Be prepared for daily unannounced quizzes • Given at the beginning of class/Lab • Students arriving after a quiz has been passed, will not be allowed to take that quiz. • THERE WILL BE NO MAKE-UP QUIZZES.
EXAMS • 3 major exams. • NO MAKE UP EXAMS • Make-up exams are given only at the discretion of the instructor and must be made up immediately. • Exams that are not made up within one week of the missed exam will receive a grade of zero. • Calculators may be used, but the memories must be cleared.
LAB AND PRELAB ASSIGNMENTS • Pre-lab assignments – due at the beginning lab • No pre-lab – No lab • Work in groups of 2-3 • Each student submits a lab report (share data) • Labs and Pre-labs assignments will be posted online (WebCT). • Instructor initials each lab report before leaving • Lab reports are due at the beginning next lab • Missed labs – fill out make up form, schedule make up with lab technician (valid excuse)
Attendance • Official Purdue policy requires attendance! • EMAIL me (especially if you will miss a lab or an exam). • You are responsible for missed work • Be on time
CLASS PARTICIPATION You will be expected to • read your email daily • listen to and/or record assignments announced in class • check the Web Site for your instructor's assignments/announcements. • Assignments that are more than one page must be stapled together before the beginning of class. • Cell phones must be turned off or set to silent ring during class or labs.
PEER RESPECT: It is important to recognize and to respect your classmates, the faculty, and staff at all times. • ACADEMIC HONESTY: Cheating and/or plagiarism will not be tolerated at any level.
WebCT Click Here
The science that deals with the materials of the universe and the changes that these materials undergo?
a change in the chemical composition of a substance to produce a new material with new properties
Ok…Physical or Chemical Change? • Water boils out of a kettle or condenses on a cold glass. • An aluminum pot is put on a burner and gets hot. • Dry ice goes from a solid to a gaseous form of carbon dioxide (sublimation). • Gold melts or solidifies. • Sand is mixed in with salt. • A piece of chalk is ground to dust. • Glass breaks. • An iron rod gets magnetized. • A lump of sugar dissolves in water.
1.melting, fusion 2.boiling, evaporation 3. sublimation 4. deposition 5. condensation 6. freezing
A form of matter that has a definite volume but does not have a definite shape