1 / 13

Teaching First Year Chemistry Dr. Kim Bolton, School of Environmental Sciences

Teaching First Year Chemistry Dr. Kim Bolton, School of Environmental Sciences. My Background. Soil and Water Chemist My First Year Experience Environmental Chemistry I and II Equivalent to standard two term 1 st year chemistry course

jalila
Download Presentation

Teaching First Year Chemistry Dr. Kim Bolton, School of Environmental Sciences

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Teaching First Year Chemistry Dr. Kim Bolton, School of Environmental Sciences

  2. My Background • Soil and Water Chemist • My First Year Experience • Environmental Chemistry I and II • Equivalent to standard two term 1styear chemistry course • Environmental chemistry examples (acid rain, ozone depletion, photochemical smog, etc.) • Lectures/labs • Course no longer exists

  3. My Background • My First Year Experience • Introductory Chemistry • Equivalent to grade 12 chemistry • Distance education format • No labs • Chemistry Today • Chemistry for non-science students (Hotel and Food Administration) • No labs

  4. Environmental Chemistry I and II • Text: Introduction to Environmental Chemistry, Nigel Bunce • Objectives • Introduction to chemical principles which govern chemical reactions in the environment • Introduction to some specific problems in environmental chemistry

  5. Environmental Chemistry I and II • Ways to engage students • Use of quantitative environmental examples: • Stoichiometry; eg) Calculate the maximum yield of sulphuric acid produced from 125 tonnes of pyrite. • Thermochemistry; eg) Calculate the mass of methane that must be burned to heat a typical house in S. Ontario on a winter day when the total heat requirement is 6.7 x 105 kJ • Photochemistry; eg) The C-Cl bond has bond dissociation energy 330 kJ mol-1, while CFCl3 absorbs radiation having λ < 220 nm. Will CFCl3 undergo bond cleavage in the lower atmosphere?

  6. Environmental Chemistry I and II • Ways to engage students • Use of quantitative environmental examples: • Kinetics; eg) The degradation of the pesticide fenvalerate in the envionment is found to be first order with k = 3.9 x 10-7 s-1. An accidental discharge of 100 kg of fenvalerate into a holding pond results in a fenvalerate concentration of 1.3 x 10-5 mol L-1. Calculate the concentration left after one month. How long before the fenvalerate concentration in the pond reaches 1 μM? • Free Energy; eg) Calculate the equilibrium constant for • 3/2 O2(g)↔ O3(g) • and estimate O3 content in stratosphere. (then compare to actual content).

  7. Environmental Chemistry I and II • Ways to engage students • Specific Environmental Topics: • Greenhouse Gases and Climate Change • Photochemical Smog and Ground Level Ozone • Water Hardness and Water Softening • Laboratory; water hardness by titration with standard EDTA • Biological Oxygen Demand (sewage and industrial waste water) • Phosphate removal from sewage • Acid Mine Drainage • “Stories” • Solubility; eg) Why do walls of the WellandCanal crumble? (CaSO4•H2O solubility) • Metal toxicity; Copper complexation story

  8. Chemistry Today • Text: Chemistry in Focus, NivaldoTro(Brooks/Cole) • First half of course addresses general chemistry principles: • Atoms and Elements • Compounds and Chemical Reactions (a little stoichiometry) • Chemical Bonding (Lewis structures) • Organic Chemistry • Acids and Bases • Second half examine some applications: • Household Chemicals • Biochemistry and Pharmaceuticals • Chemistry of Food • Chemistry of the Environment

  9. Chemistry Today • Way to engage students • Group Project - groups assigned "mystery ingredient list“ • Required to produce report • should be informative and should be written for the general public • for a popular science or health magazine.

  10. Chemistry Today

  11. Introductory Chemistry and Chemistry Today • Both Distance Education Courses • Way to engage students • OWL Homework (Cengage)

  12. 1st year students • Student preparation quite variable • Strengths • Confidence • Willingness to ask for help • Weaknesses • Math!! (basic algebra; dimensional analysis) • Problem solving skills • Fear (and loathing) of chemistry • General 1st year issues • Maturity • Time management

More Related