My Notes
Categories
Students read Oliver Sacks' autobiography "Uncle Tungsten" and take turns writing chapter summaries and discussion questions. Some chapters focus on Sacks' childhood chemical explorations and others on the historical period of his youth. In the summary, students are asked to either explain the chemistry in contemporary terms OR explain the context (what was going on in the world) of the historical pieces.
Attachment | Size |
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uncletungsten_sample_discussion_questions.doc | 30 KB |
uncletungsten_rubric.doc | 50 KB |
uncletungsten_assignment_1.doc | 28 KB |
We spread this out throughout the semester, reading a couple chapters a week. Students posted their discussion questions to our class web site.
Evaluation
I have attached a copy of the rubric I used for the students' chapter summaries. We discussed some of the discussion questions in class and I put some of them on the hour tests. I have attached a file with some samples of student discussion questions.
We did this for fun and to push students to think about the chemistry they were learning in a very different context. It did, in fact, turn out to be a lot of fun; one of the most fun things I've done in a class. Students commented that it was the first time they had been asked to read a novel in a chemistry class.
Comments
This sounds like a fantastic idea. At some point within the next few years, I will be asked to teach a first year seminar course. The content is entirely up to me, so long as it meets the general objective of teaching college-level critical thinking and writing skills. I think that coupling this book to others of a similar theme would make for a good course. I loved reading this book. In fact, I met Oliver Sacks at the Fall 2007 ACS meeting and had him autograph my copy.
Randall Hicks Assistant Professor Wheaton College (MA)
In reply to Implementing this idea by Randall Hicks / Wheaton College
With thanks to Donna Sundre from JMU, we learned about a podcast interview with Sacks where he describes the periodic table paraphernalia in his home. It's great!
You can get it through iTunes (Best of the Left, the Feb 10, 2009 show called "The Laws of the Universe") or you can get it directly from the Best of the Left site: http://www.bestoftheleftpodcast.com/ (Podcast #253).
The Oliver Sacks part is in "Chapter 8" of the podcast.
In reply to I look forward to its implementation by Nancy Williams / Scripps College, Pitzer College, Claremont McKenna College