Latest articles, blogs, and events from the chemical education community

text: The AP Exam is Over. NOW WHAT?
// Friday, May 28, 2021 Kristen Drury
I have been teaching AP Chemistry for 13 years and every year I have multiple weeks of instruction following the AP Chemistry Exam. I have tried many different ideas for instruction during those weeks. In years past I have taught introduction to organic chemistry and/or nuclear chemistry.
// Wednesday, May 26, 2021 Scott Donnelly
Like a lot of folks (including students), I love brownies. My teaching style and objectives emphasize the applications of chemistry learned in lecture to everyday consumer products familiar to students.
text: Teaching Chemistry with Case Studies
// Tuesday, May 25, 2021 Josh Kenney
Case studies have been a staple of undergraduate and graduate education programs like medicine, law, and business, for many years.
// Monday, May 24, 2021 Joseph Lomax
Students often are so confused that they cannot formulate a question. This is not bad, but is a good starting point in their learning. Getting such a student to talk through a problem, to the best of their abilities, typically causes them to stumble through their words. This is great. 
orange balloon in pan of dry ice
// Saturday, May 22, 2021 Ben Meacham
The first time I taught an Honors chemistry class, I noticed there was one additional topic in our unit on gases that differed from our General chem and Concepts chem classes: ideal vs. real gas behavior.
4 images of open laptop as they appear to flip
// Friday, May 21, 2021 Kristen Drury
Why I Started Flipping As a flipped classroom teacher for almost a decade, I have gone through many major shifts in my teaching philosophies and it has changes the way I have delivered my videos.
electronic balance
// Thursday, May 20, 2021 Michael Jansen
Good day, gentle readers: Back in the day, and I’m talking, like, over 40 years ago, I had the good fortune to be invited, in spite of my lackluster performance in Organic Chemistry, to work as a summer student in Professor Tom Tidwell’s lab at the University of Toronto.
An example of a study group selfie photo from the author's chemistry course taken in a laboratory setting
// Wednesday, May 19, 2021 Thomas Cox
As teachers, we are likely all trying to build a healthy learning community within our classrooms. And as teachers, we additionally encourage students to form chemistry study groups. I also want students to have a sense of belonging within the chemistry class and laboratory.