Chemistry: A Guided Inquiry, Part 2

Edition: 8

Copyright: 2022

Pages: 242

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ISBN 9781792498664

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In the newly updated 8th Edition, Chemistry: A Guided Inquiry continues to follow the evidence-based principles of inquiry learning, emphasizing the development of underlying chemistry concepts through analysis and interpretation of information. Part II includes activities that address most of the topics typically addressed in a second semester general chemistry course including thermochemistry, equilibrium, kinetics, acids and bases, oxidation-reduction processes, and thermodynamics.

If you are interested in having instructor resources please reach out to POGILKHrep@kendallhunt.com.

 

Kendall Hunt is excited to partner with The POGIL Project to publish materials in a variety of disciplines that are designed for use in active learning, student-centered classrooms.

POGIL is an acronym for Process Oriented Guided Inquiry Learning. Because POGIL is a student-centered instructional approach, in a typical POGIL classroom or laboratory, students work in small teams with the instructor acting as a facilitator. The student teams use specially designed activities that generally follow a learning cycle paradigm. These activities are designed to have three key characteristics:

  • They are designed for use with self-managed teams that employ the instructor as a facilitator of learning rather than a source of information.
  • They guide students through an exploration to construct understanding.
  • They use discipline content to facilitate the development of important process skills, including higher-level thinking and the ability to learn and to apply knowledge in new contexts. 

For more information, please visit www.pogil.org

To the Instructor

To the Student

Thermochemistry
Is Energy Released or Used When a Bond Breaks?
Is Energy Released or Consumed When a Chemical Reaction Occurs?

Equilibrium
What is the Rate of a Chemical Reaction?
Do Reactions Ever Really Stop?
What Happens When a Reaction Reaches Equilibrium?
What Describes the Amounts at Equilibrium?
If We're Not at Equilibrium, Which Way Do We Go?
How Soluble Are Ionic Salts?

Acids and Bases
What are Acids and Bases?
How Strong is an Acid?
How Much Acid or Base Reacts?
What is pH?
What Makes an Acid Strong?
How Are Ka and Kb Related?

Oxidation-Reduction
What is a Redox Reaction?
What are Oxidation Numbers?
How Does a Battery Work?
What Determines the Cell Voltage?

Thermodynamics
What is Entropy?
What Determines if Reactions Occur?
How is a Change in Entropy Calculated?
What Determines the Magnitude of the Equilibrium Constant?
How Are DeltaG°​ and K Related?

Kinetics
How Do Reactant Concentrations Affect the Rate? How Does Reactant Concentration Change as a Reaction Proceeds?
How Fast Will a Reaction Be?
What is a Reaction Mechanism?
What is a Catalyst?
How Does Temperature Influence Rate of Reaction?

Solids and Liquids
What Determines a Boiling Point?

Appendix
TABLE A.1 Values of Selected Fundamental Constants
TABLE A.2 Selected Conversion Factors
TABLE A.3 Standard-State Enthalpies, Free Energies, and Entropies of Atom Combination

The POGIL Project

Kendall Hunt is excited to partner with The POGIL Project to publish materials in a variety of disciplines that are designed for use in active learning, student-centered classrooms.

POGIL is an acronym for Process Oriented Guided Inquiry Learning. Because POGIL is a student-centered instructional approach, in a typical POGIL classroom or laboratory, students work in small teams with the instructor acting as a facilitator. The student teams use specially designed activities that generally follow a learning cycle paradigm. These activities are designed to have three key characteristics:

  • They are designed for use with self-managed teams that employ the instructor as a facilitator of learning rather than a source of information.
  • They guide students through an exploration to construct understanding.
  • They use discipline content to facilitate the development of important process skills, including higher-level thinking and the ability to learn and to apply knowledge in new contexts. 

For more information, please visit www.pogil.org

Rick Moog
Rick Moog received an A.B. in chemistry from Williams College and a Ph.D. in physical chemistry from Stanford University. He is currently Professor of Chemistry at Franklin & Marshall College and the Executive Director of The POGIL Project. He is a proud recipient of the 2016 George C. Pimentel Award in Chemical Education from the American Chemical Society. Rick has been using a guided inquiry approach to teaching and chemistry since 1994, and is the coauthor of POGIL materials for general chemistry and physical chemistry.
Gail H. Webster
Gail Webster received her B.S. in secondary chemistry education from Virginia Commonwealth University and M.S. and Ph.D. degrees in analytical chemistry from North Carolina State University. She taught chemistry for twenty-five years at both the high school and college levels. Always an advocate of student-centered learning, she incorporated POGIL pedagogy in her classes in 2004 and then became active within the POGIL community. She is currently a AAAS Science and Technology Policy Fellow at the U.S. Department of Energy. She has been a AAAS Science and Technology Policy Fellow at the U.S. Department of Energy and is currently a senior STEM Analyst with Strategic Analysis in Alexandria, VA.
John J. Farrell
John J. Farrell is Emeritus Professor of Chemistry at Franklin & Marshall College. He earned his doctorate from the University of Pittsburgh in 1964 and began working at F&M in Lancaster, PA, the next year. In 2021, Farrell was honored by his undergraduate alma mater as a recipient of the Baldwin Wallace Alumni Merit Award, the highest honor conferred upon a grade by the university.

In the newly updated 8th Edition, Chemistry: A Guided Inquiry continues to follow the evidence-based principles of inquiry learning, emphasizing the development of underlying chemistry concepts through analysis and interpretation of information. Part II includes activities that address most of the topics typically addressed in a second semester general chemistry course including thermochemistry, equilibrium, kinetics, acids and bases, oxidation-reduction processes, and thermodynamics.

If you are interested in having instructor resources please reach out to POGILKHrep@kendallhunt.com.

 

Kendall Hunt is excited to partner with The POGIL Project to publish materials in a variety of disciplines that are designed for use in active learning, student-centered classrooms.

POGIL is an acronym for Process Oriented Guided Inquiry Learning. Because POGIL is a student-centered instructional approach, in a typical POGIL classroom or laboratory, students work in small teams with the instructor acting as a facilitator. The student teams use specially designed activities that generally follow a learning cycle paradigm. These activities are designed to have three key characteristics:

  • They are designed for use with self-managed teams that employ the instructor as a facilitator of learning rather than a source of information.
  • They guide students through an exploration to construct understanding.
  • They use discipline content to facilitate the development of important process skills, including higher-level thinking and the ability to learn and to apply knowledge in new contexts. 

For more information, please visit www.pogil.org

To the Instructor

To the Student

Thermochemistry
Is Energy Released or Used When a Bond Breaks?
Is Energy Released or Consumed When a Chemical Reaction Occurs?

Equilibrium
What is the Rate of a Chemical Reaction?
Do Reactions Ever Really Stop?
What Happens When a Reaction Reaches Equilibrium?
What Describes the Amounts at Equilibrium?
If We're Not at Equilibrium, Which Way Do We Go?
How Soluble Are Ionic Salts?

Acids and Bases
What are Acids and Bases?
How Strong is an Acid?
How Much Acid or Base Reacts?
What is pH?
What Makes an Acid Strong?
How Are Ka and Kb Related?

Oxidation-Reduction
What is a Redox Reaction?
What are Oxidation Numbers?
How Does a Battery Work?
What Determines the Cell Voltage?

Thermodynamics
What is Entropy?
What Determines if Reactions Occur?
How is a Change in Entropy Calculated?
What Determines the Magnitude of the Equilibrium Constant?
How Are DeltaG°​ and K Related?

Kinetics
How Do Reactant Concentrations Affect the Rate? How Does Reactant Concentration Change as a Reaction Proceeds?
How Fast Will a Reaction Be?
What is a Reaction Mechanism?
What is a Catalyst?
How Does Temperature Influence Rate of Reaction?

Solids and Liquids
What Determines a Boiling Point?

Appendix
TABLE A.1 Values of Selected Fundamental Constants
TABLE A.2 Selected Conversion Factors
TABLE A.3 Standard-State Enthalpies, Free Energies, and Entropies of Atom Combination

The POGIL Project

Kendall Hunt is excited to partner with The POGIL Project to publish materials in a variety of disciplines that are designed for use in active learning, student-centered classrooms.

POGIL is an acronym for Process Oriented Guided Inquiry Learning. Because POGIL is a student-centered instructional approach, in a typical POGIL classroom or laboratory, students work in small teams with the instructor acting as a facilitator. The student teams use specially designed activities that generally follow a learning cycle paradigm. These activities are designed to have three key characteristics:

  • They are designed for use with self-managed teams that employ the instructor as a facilitator of learning rather than a source of information.
  • They guide students through an exploration to construct understanding.
  • They use discipline content to facilitate the development of important process skills, including higher-level thinking and the ability to learn and to apply knowledge in new contexts. 

For more information, please visit www.pogil.org

Rick Moog
Rick Moog received an A.B. in chemistry from Williams College and a Ph.D. in physical chemistry from Stanford University. He is currently Professor of Chemistry at Franklin & Marshall College and the Executive Director of The POGIL Project. He is a proud recipient of the 2016 George C. Pimentel Award in Chemical Education from the American Chemical Society. Rick has been using a guided inquiry approach to teaching and chemistry since 1994, and is the coauthor of POGIL materials for general chemistry and physical chemistry.
Gail H. Webster
Gail Webster received her B.S. in secondary chemistry education from Virginia Commonwealth University and M.S. and Ph.D. degrees in analytical chemistry from North Carolina State University. She taught chemistry for twenty-five years at both the high school and college levels. Always an advocate of student-centered learning, she incorporated POGIL pedagogy in her classes in 2004 and then became active within the POGIL community. She is currently a AAAS Science and Technology Policy Fellow at the U.S. Department of Energy. She has been a AAAS Science and Technology Policy Fellow at the U.S. Department of Energy and is currently a senior STEM Analyst with Strategic Analysis in Alexandria, VA.
John J. Farrell
John J. Farrell is Emeritus Professor of Chemistry at Franklin & Marshall College. He earned his doctorate from the University of Pittsburgh in 1964 and began working at F&M in Lancaster, PA, the next year. In 2021, Farrell was honored by his undergraduate alma mater as a recipient of the Baldwin Wallace Alumni Merit Award, the highest honor conferred upon a grade by the university.