RSC - Advancing the Chemical Sciences


Education

 

July 2009

Vol 46, No 4. Selected articles and reviews available online to all. Full issue available online to subscribers. 

July 2009

Column

Teenagers in class

GCSE criteria under scrutiny

Qualifications and Curriculum Authority (QCA) launches consultation into the GCSE science criteria which could lead to a radical overhaul of specifications



Dawn horizon

RSC education changes on the horizon

Update on changes made to the Royal Society of Chemistry's (RSC) education department



Professor Tina Overton

Leading the way forward in chemical education

This year's winner of the Nyholm Prize for Education is Professor Tina Overton of the University of Hull



Chemistry funding

Funding to support chemistry in schools

The Royal Society of Chemistry's Biological and Medicinal Chemistry Sector Education Support Group offers schools support to buy enhanced science equipment and run chemistry clubs



researcher in lab

The chemistry PhD experience

This autumn sees the launch of 45 Doctoral Training Centres (DTCs) in science and engineering in 20 universities across the UK



Scotland

Support for education reform in Scotland

Royal Society of Chemistry and the Royal Society of Edinburgh launch project to support science teachers in implementing Scotland's new Curriculum for Excellence. Educ. Chem., 2009...



Barcelona segrada familia

RSC takes chemistry teachers to Barcelona

A group of teachers from the UK visit three different organisations based in Barcelona to get first-hand experience of industrial processes



apple

Chemistry Week 2009

The Royal Society of Chemistry's (RSC) Chemistry Week 2009 will run from 7-15 November with food as its theme



In brief

Items: Various short items



netgains

Netgains

New websites: 'Cutting vehicle pollution' - school science resource and 'Beschoice' virtual learning environment extends to GCSE Science



woman hiker

Chemistry trails

Peter Borrows takes us on another excursion into local chemistry. In this issue: colloid chemistry at the coffee shop



Cocaine and Euro note

Soundbite molecules

Simon Cotton, teacher at Uppingham School, takes a look at those compounds that find themselves in the news or relate to our everyday lives. In this issue: dirty money



Web key

Web watch

Tony Tooth, teacher at The King's School in Ely, looks at some websites that may be of interest to chemistry teachers. In this issue: BMW and Wikipedia


Letters

Post box

Letters

Education in Chemistry Letters, July 2009


Exhibition Chemistry

Soap in flask

Soap from bacon - the dangers of alkaline solutions

Demonstrations to capture the student's imagination, by Adrian Guy of Blundell's School. In this issue: Soap from bacon - the dangers of alkaline solutions


The Elements

Tap water

The Elements

John Emsley, University of Cambridge, takes you on a tour of the Periodic Table. In this issue: Can this most vicious of elements, Fluorine, be tamed?


Features

Green flasks and Periodic Table

Catalysts for a green industry

Chemists are working to develop new, longer-lasting catalysts to ensure industrial processes are cleaner, greener and more efficient



Green fluorescent protein

Fluorescence lifetime imaging microscopy

Scientists are using this non-invasive technique to cast light on the workings of living cells to learn more about the molecular mechanisms involved in cancer, allergies and immune...



Charles Darwin by John Collier

Survival of the fittest

Examples of natural products produced by organisms and plants to overcome competing species and predators provide chemical evidence for Darwin's legacy of natural selection



What is entropy?

What's the best way to introduce to your students this most misunderstood of thermodynamic properties?


Distillates

Gold standard diagnosis

Chemists use gold nanoparticles to help medics detect a marker molecule for prostate cancer



cement

Making green cement

Portuguese researchers use waste products from the paper industry to produce greener cement



Faraday's hot science in the ultracold

Promising new research into the properties of molecules close to absolute zero could offer up new insights into the nature of matter



Solid silica sponge

Chemists in Singapore and Sweden synthesise unique silica material with sponge like properties which could have applications in separation science, catalysis and drug delivery


Reviews

Origins of life in the universe

Robert Jastrow and Michael Rampino



Salters' advanced chemistry chemical storylines A2 (3rd edn)

Derek Denby, Chris Otter and Kay Stephenson








Endpoint

Business meeting

Please talk more...

Rodney Townsend has the last word


Infochem

Infochem July 2009 cover

InfoChem July 2009

In this month's pupil supplement: Chemists in space; Hang time with Bruce Willis; A day in the life of an advanced scientist