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he
hihe branch of chemistry dealing with substances found in living
things may reveal that in the living things taking Chemistry 151,
one substance rarely found is a passion for organic chemistry.
If you're pre-med, you can't forego orgo. Because premeds make
up the vast majority of the class, their presence, say professors,
has taken the content in a new direction. "Generally, [premeds]
aren't interested unless there is a focus on chemistry's biological
application, so that's the direction the content has taken," says
Ross Widenhoefer, an associate professor. "It's being catered
to those students who want to go into a health-related field."
For instance, instead of focusing on organic metals, professors
might illustrate a concept through pharmacology, focusing on analgesics
such as Tylenol or Advil. The compounds and the functional groups
can change. What's important is that students learn to identify
the reaction mechanisms. This might be a positive step toward capturing
students' interests. However, one problem, says Widenhoefer, "is
that the research might be too complicated for making the fundamental
points we want to get across."
While there is some debate over the best way to teach organic chemistry,
there is agreement over the importance of making things, if not
fantastically intriguing, at least modestly palatable. And acquiring
that taste, realizing orgo's relevance to the outer world, says
Professor Eric Toone, is up to the student. "What happens
is students try to cram in 10,000 reactions before the test. Then
they go to the pub and press reset. And what have they learned?" The
course, he says, is not about memorization: "That's a waste
of time. It's about how you think and whether or not you can connect
the concepts of organic chemistry to things that occur in everyday
life--which is an awful lot of things."
Reading
Organic Chemistry, 3rd edition, G. Marc Loudon and Joseph G. Stowell,
Benjamin/ Cummings Publishing Co., 1995.
Organic Chemistry Laboratory, Bell, Clark, Taber, and Rodig, Saunders
Publishing Co., 1997.
Study Guide & Solutions Manual, Vol. 1 to accompany above text.
A set of flexible molecular models.
Assignments, Exams (and help with them)
Students are responsible for the material in the Loudon text, which
includes sample problems; however, no homework is collected.
There are three one-hour exams and one thirty-minute quiz.
Everyone must enroll in and attend a laboratory section, and performance
there accounts for 25 percent of the class grade.
Free tutoring is available through the Peer Tutoring Office, and
private tutors (grad and post-doc students) are also available.
A list of tutors is posted.
Review sessions are held the day before an exam by the class instructor.
Students may use old exams and problem sets to prepare for exams.
Professors
Eric Toone
Ross Widenhoefer
Steven Baldwin
Steven Craig
Michael Pirrung
Michael Montague-Smith
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