RSC - Advancing the Chemical Sciences


Education

 

March 2009

Vol 46, No 2. Selected articles and reviews available online to all. Full issue available online to subscribers. 

March 2009

Column

International tests

How well do 14-year olds in England do in science and mathematics compared to their peers on the world stage?



National HE STEM programme sets roots in Birmingham

University of Birmingham to host HEFCE's initiative to increase and widen participation in science, technology, engineering and mathematics in higher education



New CPD option for non-specialist chemistry teachers

Training and Development Agency for Schools to launch a national Science Additional Specialism Programme (SASP) for teachers of physics and chemistry



Chemistry Olympiad poster

Chemistry Olympiad classroom resources

Questions from annual national competition provide excellent teaching resources for AS- and A-level chemistry



student in lab

Best practice in practical work

The science community, under the SCORE banner, launches framework for practical science in secondary schools



Practical skills certificate for level 3

Awarding body OCR launches certificate in practical chemistry for level 3 academic and vocational qualifications



bottles of chemicals

What's in a name?

Many chemical compounds have several possible names. Peter Nelson, University of Hull, asks: 'Which ones should teachers use?'



GCSE specifications: how do they compare?

The RSC Curriculum and Assessment Group provides summary of the content of current GCSE chemistry specifications



Mastering Bologna

The Royal Society of Chemistry publishes a report on the readiness of UK chemistry departments to succeed in the European Higher Education Area (EHEA)



In brief

Items: Various short items



netgains

Netgains

New websites: 'How science works' resources, Materials for Key Stages 3 and 4 from the Science Museum, and flash bang demos



woman hiker

Chemistry trails

Peter Borrows takes us on another excursion into local chemistry. In this issue: the nanochemistry trail



Web key

Web watch

Tony Tooth, chemistry teacher at The King's School in Ely, looks at some websites that may be of interest to chemistry teachers. In this issue: GCSE and A-level teaching resources


Letters

Letters

Education in Chemistry Letters, March 2009


Exhibition Chemistry

carbon monoxide flame

Carbon monoxide

Demonstrations to capture the student's imagination, by Adrian Guy of Blundell's School. In this issue: carbon monoxide


The Elements

Visual Elements symbol for titanium

Titanium

Forget iron and aluminium, titanium is the metal of the future


Features

Boy smelling flower

If it smells - it's chemistry

Smell is the most chemical of all the senses - but what's the theory behind the practice?



Periodic Table

Ida Noddack and the missing elements

Distinguished women chemist of the early 20th century identifies element 75, one of the gaps in Mendeleev's Table, and is the first to appreciate nuclear fission



Colorado beetle

Crop protection chemicals

By 2030, the world's population is expected to rise to over eight billion - the need for safe and environmentally friendly crop protection chemical has never been greater



Blue dye

Intuitive thinking and learning chemistry

Understanding students' intuitions about the world could provide insight into their misconceptions of chemical concepts


Distillates

AA alkaine battery

Discharged chemical cocktail

Researchers in Portugal use atomic absorption spectroscopy to identify the chemical cocktail of gases released when used alkaline batteries are incinerated



Toy figurines

Wooden you know?

German scientists produce new materials that look and behave like plastics from 'liquid wood'



Tractor on landfill

A green cap for landfills

Australian scientists cap landfill sites in arid regions with trees and plants to absorb the greenhouse gases methane and carbon dioxide



Mount Etna erupting

Chemistry goes tubular

Chemists in Germany use carbon nanotubes to activate butane, and thus make useful precursor molecules for pharma industry, without the need for expensive catalysts


Reviews



Fantastic plastic

Averil Macdonald


Endpoint

chemistry student

Practically minded

Anthony Hardwicke has the last word


Infochem

Infochem March 2009 cover

InfoChem March 2009

In this month's pupil supplement: Anti-obesity drugs; demonstrating Boyle's Law; a day in the life of a senior science technician