Background for the Project
Link to
full article in the Journal of Chemical Education or read synopsis below.
Collectively, the authors of this text have spent nearly 90 years teaching in the
traditional first-year (general chemistry) and second-year (organic chemistry) sequence.
Over that time, our experience showed that capable and motivated students often found
chemistry too abstract, too theoretical, and uninspiring. Students would likely finish
a year of the traditional curriculum with little or no idea of what most chemists
actually do. Even those students who were sufficiently inspired to continue their
studies in science beyond organic chemistry apparently made few of the vital
connections between the traditional first- and second-year courses. Those reinforcing
links, the parallels that were obvious to the teachers, were completely hidden from
the students actually going through the process the first time. Our curriculum
was tightly bound by disciplinary divisions: intermediate-level inorganic and
physical chemistry concepts had to be covered the first year (whether students were
prepared to learn them or not); hybridization and molecular structures that were
taught the first year were repeated the second year because the compounds contained
carbon. We had a curriculum that, although commonly taught across most college
campuses, satisfied neither the instructors nor the students.
In place of the traditional curriculum, we dreamed of a course that would bring
all the major branches of chemistry into view starting the very first semester;
a course that allowed a student to appreciate much of what practicing chemists
actually do; a course that led students from observations to theories, not the
reverse. We realized, however, that without the appropriate texts, our dream
course would never materialize. So we wrote a two-volume, four-semester text from which
to teach. Our experience teaching the new curriculum at Illinois Wesleyan, the
experience of instructors at other trial sites, and especially the responses from
the students involved, indicate that we are definitely on the right track. We
hope that, after you check out the project on this web site, you will think so
as well.