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CHM119

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

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CHM119

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  1. Dr. Jenkins CHM119 An Introduction to General, Organic, and Biological Chemistry Lecture 1 1/9-1/11

  2. 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

  3. 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

  4. Syllabus Additional Contact Info: • Lab Technician (Betsy Papka) • 219-785-5218, SWRZ 317 • Biology/Chemistry Office Secretary • 219-785-5298, SWRZ 120

  5. 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!

  6. 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.

  7. 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!

  8. 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).

  9. 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)

  10. 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.

  11. 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.

  12. 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.

  13. TUTORIALS • During my office hours • You are strongly encouraged to get help as soon as you feel help is needed.

  14. GRADING • The cumulative grade for this course will be based on the following:

  15. 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.

  16. 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)

  17. 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

  18. 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.

  19. 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.

  20. 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)

  21. LATE ASSIGNMENTS & MAKE-UP POLICY

  22. 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

  23. 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.

  24. 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.

  25. WebCT Click Here

  26. Click Here

  27. How much do you remember?

  28. Anything that has mass and takes up space

  29. matter

  30. What are 3 states of Matter?

  31. Solid, liquids, and Gases

  32. What is the 4th state of Matter?

  33. Plasma

  34. An Example of the 4th State of Matter?

  35. The Sun (Stars)

  36. What elements make up the Sun?

  37. Hydrogen and Helium

  38. The science that deals with the materials of the universe and the changes that these materials undergo?

  39. Chemistry

  40. a change in the chemical composition of a substance to produce a new material with new properties

  41. Chemical change

  42. Give 2 examples of a chemical change

  43. Give 2 examples of a Physical change

  44. 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.

  45. 1.melting, fusion 2.boiling, evaporation 3. sublimation 4. deposition 5. condensation 6. freezing

  46. A form of matter that has a definite shape and volume

  47. solid

  48. A form of matter that has a definite volume but does not have a definite shape

  49. liquid

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