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JCE 96.05 May 2019 Issue Highlights

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Journal of Chemical Education May 2019 Cover

Encouraging Student Learning and Success

The May 2019 issue of the Journal of Chemical Education is now available to subscribers. Topics featured in this issue include: microscale precipitation chemistry; making science personal; chemical escape rooms; teaching organic chemistry; peer learning; laboratory assessment; examining cognitive load; inquiry activities; exploring infrared spectroscopy; laboratory experiments; teaching resources; shaking the archives: the blue bottle experiment.

Cover: Microscale Precipitation Chemistry

Microscale and green chemistry methods have a major impact on the general chemistry laboratory experience. Precipitation reactions, once investigated in test tubes, can be performed with as little as two crystals and a 10-drop puddle of water, as described by Bob Worley, Eric M. Villa, Jess M. Gunn, and Bruce Mattson in . The photo sequence on the cover shows crystals of silver nitrate and potassium iodide, both carried by moistened toothpicks, and brought to the puddle where they can be seen to shrink in size as they dissolve. The ions migrate across the puddle and within 15 s a precipitate of silver iodide starts to form at the interface of the two local solutions. The precipitate continues to develop along the interface. (Photo credit: Peter Stone, Department of Chemistry, Creighton University.)

On ChemEd X: Chad Husting has previously commented on this “puddle chemistry” experiment in his blog post:  

Making Science Personal

To encourage the persistence of underrepresented populations in STEM begins in gateway science courses like general chemistry, Stephanie N. Knezz shares her thoughts on .

To show the role of science in our daily lives, Manuel F. Molina and José G. Carriazo explore .

Chemical Escape Rooms

The popular genre of “escape rooms” is brought into the chemistry classroom in three articles in this issue, as discussed by Erica Jacobsen in:

~ Ran Peleg, Malka Yayon, Dvora Katchevich, Mor Moria-Shipony, and Ron Blonder

~ Matthew J. Vergne, Joshua D. Simmons, and Ryan S. Bowen

~ David Watermeier and Bridget Salzameda

Teaching Organic Chemistry

~ Christian Fischer, Ninger Zhou, Fernando Rodriguez, Mark Warschauer, and Susan King

~ Naha J. Farhat, Courtney Stanford, and Suzanne M. Ruder

~ Luca Costantino and Daniela Barlocco

Peer Learning 

~ Norda S. Stephenson, Imron R. Miller, and Novelette P. Sadler-McKnight

~ Russell J. Pearson

~ Jennifer Clary-Lemon, Rachelle Gervacio, and Devin Latimer

Laboratory Assessment

~ Stephanie Santos-Díaz, Sarah Hensiek, Taylor Owings, and Marcy H. Towns

~ Garland L. Crawford and Kathryn D. Kloepper

Examining Cognitive Load

~ Jessica M. Karch, Josibel C. García Valles, and Hannah Sevian

Inquiry Activities

~ W. J. Koshut, A. M. Arnold, Z. C. Smith, Z. M. Wright, and S. A. Sydlik

~ Michelle L. Kovarik and Jill K. Robinson

~ Erin M. Kolonko and Kristopher J. Kolonko

~ Dean J. Tantillo, Justin B. Siegel, Carla M. Saunders, Teresa A. Palazzo, Phillip P. Painter, Terrence E. O’Brien, Nicole N. Nuñez, Dustin H. Nouri, Michael W. Lodewyk, Brandi M. Hudson, Stephanie R. Hare, and Rebecca L. Davis

~ Arthur M. Halpern and Robert J. Noll

~ Spiros A. Pergantis, Iakovos Saridakis, Alexandros Lyratzakis, Leonidas Mavroudakis, and Tamsyn Montagnon

~ Asiel N. Corpus-Mendoza, Paola M. Moreno-Romero, and Hailin Hu

Exploring Infrared Spectroscopy 

~ Amy M. Balija and Layne A. Morsch

~ P. G. Rodríguez Ortega, R. Casas Jaraíces, Marta Romero-Ariza, and M. Montejo

~ Lyniesha C. Wright and Maria T. Oliver-Hoyo

Laboratory Experiments

~ Paige J. Monsen and Frederick A. Luzzio

~ Emily A. Shimizu, Brett Cory, Johnson Hoang, Giovanni G. Castro, Michael E. Jung, and David A. Vosburg

~ Yoann Roupioz

~ Paul C. Stanish, Howard Siu, and Pavle V. Radovanovic

~ Javier Llanos, Ángel Pérez, and Antonio de Lucas-Consuegra

~ Edon Vitaku and Hamish S. Christie

Teaching Resources

~ Sarah L. Cresswell, Wendy A. Loughlin, Mark J. Coster, and David M. Green

~ Dane Scott and Daniel Firth

~ Steven M. Drew, Deborah S. Gross, William E. Hollingsworth, Thomas Baraniak, Christopher M. Zall, and Kent R. Mann

~ Frank Weinhold

Shaking the Archives: The Blue Bottle Experiment

This issue includes a demonstration by Nicolas Dietrich, Kritchart Wongwailikhit, Mei Mei, Feishi Xu, Francisco Felis, Abderrahmane Kherbeche, Gilles Hébrard, and Karine Loubière that involves . It is a twist on the popular “blue bottle” experiment,  in which a solution containing glucose, NaOH, and methylene blue turns blue when shaken and becomes colorless while standing (a video of this can be seen as part of Michael Morgan’s ChemEd X post ). This demonstration was popularized by J. Arthur Campbell in 1963 as a way to introduce concepts of kinetics, mechanisms, catalysis, and steady-state conditions (). Over the years, discussions of and variations on this demonstration have appeared on the cover:

and in the pages of JCE:

~ A. Gilbert Cook, Randi M. Tolliver, and Janelle E. Williams

~ Walter R. Vandaveer IV and Mel Mosher

~ Steven C. Engerer and A. Gilbert Cook

~ Sarah Mowry and Paul J. Ogren

~ Whitney E. Wellman, Mark E. Noble, and Tom Healy

(JCE Classroom Activity on the Blue Bottle) ~ Mark E. Noble

~ Felicia A. Staiger, Joshua P. Peterson, and Dean J. Campbell

~ Taweetham Limpanuparb, Cherprang Areekul, Punchalee Montriwat, and Urawadee Rajchakit (See Erica Jacobsen's for a discussion of this article.)

~ Urawadee Rajchakit and Taweetham Limpanuparb  

~ Urawadee Rajchakit and Taweetham Limpanuparb 

~ Patrick M. Piccione, Adamu Abubakar Rasheed, Andrew Quarmby, and Davide Dionisi

~ Laurens Anderson, Stacy M. Wittkopp, Christopher J. Painter, Jessica J. Liegel, Rodney Schreiner, Jerry A. Bell, and Bassam Z. Shakhashiri

JCE: Encouraging Chemical Education 

With volumes of issues to explore, you will always find content that will shake or stir you—including the , and many more, in the . Articles that are edited and published online ahead of print ( are also available.

Summer is almost here! Please consider submitting a contribution to the Journal of Chemical Education. Erica Jacobsen’s Commentary, , gives great advice on writing for the Journal. In addition, numerous author resources are available on JCE’s ACS Web site, including: and .


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