On Monday, October 26, I asked several students in 2nd and 3rd hour to write down, on a notecard, three things that they think of when they hear chemistry. The most common responses were chemicals and labs or experiements. I was hoping for responses like materials (e.g. plastics, synthetic fabrics) or food, things that the students encounter on a daily basis.
Now that the students have begun covering chemistry basics, my plan is to focus presentations on the chemistry that they encounter in their everyday life. I gave my first of such presentations today on water treatment (which is part of the field of environmental engineering). I made some connections to myself and what I do as an environmental engineering and emphasized why water treatment is important to their lives; I think the students got the point that I was trying to make. No one thinks about water treatment, they just expect that the water from the faucet will be safe to drink, and by safe I mean won't make them sick. Most people doesn't know what happens to things that go down the drain.
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Monisha,
I think it is important to relate chemistry to our everyday lives. What kind of questions did the students have about your presentation? Did they identify the chemistry in water treatment? Is chemistry making improvements in water treatment?
Carol Cramer
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