Notes
Teaching Ideas and Suggestions
Thermochemistry represents one more opoortunity within the chemistry curriculum to revisit the importance of the coefficients in a balanced chemical equation. The components define the relationship between the moles of reactants and products and (in the case of thermochemical equations) the amount of energy released or absorbed by the system during the reaction. This Concept Builder provides three scaffolded activities to lead students through the process of implementing an understanding of stoichiometric relationships that pertain to energy. There are a total of 16 multi-part questions that have been organized into three levels of difficulty.
In the Apprentice Difficulty Level, students complete a 4-row table using the Gibb's Free Energy equation. Students convert ∆S to units of kJ/mol and temperature from °C to Kelvin and then use the equation to calculate ∆G. The emphasis is on gaining some comfort with the use of the equation. Students also identify the reaction as spontaneous or non-spontaneous. In the Master Difficulty Level, students complete a 5-row table with less given structure. Each row involves a calculation of ∆G. Students also identify the reaction as spontaneous or non-spontaneous. In the Wizard Difficulty Level, students must complete a 5-row table. The unknown varies in each row of the table. There's a greater emphasis on the use of algebra skills to solve for an unknown other than ∆G.
The Questions are shown on a separate page (viewable by logged-in teachers only). Teachers are encouraged to view the questions in order to judge which activities are most appropriate for their classes and what level of preparation would be required. We recommend doing the activities in order. There is no redundancy in the actvitiies. While they are independent activities, they have been designed to be scaffolded such that one activity builds on the confidence that was derived from the previous activity.
Our Concept Builders typically utilize a variety of strategies to make each student's experience different. The main strategy employed here is to provide multiple tables for each level. A table is selected at random and presented to the student. This reduces the likelihood that two side-by-side students would have the same question.
Health Bar
We leave it to the discretion of individual teachers as to what they wish to do with the Health rating information. We recognize that there will be some teachers who feel most comfortable with their students in simply requiring that a difficulty level be completed and trophy be earned. Other teachers may wish to require completion of a difficulty level with a minimum Health rating. For instance, such teachers may require that each difficulty level be completed with a 70% or higher Health rating. Still other teachers may tie the Health rating into a grade or allow a homework pass for completing an activity that exceeds a 90% Health rating. Decisions as to what to do with the Health rating are best left for individual teachers who know their students the best.
Task Tracker Notice: As of this writing we do not record Health Ratings in our Task Tracker database. It is for on-screen use only when used in the classroom in the presence of a teacher. The teacher can validated the Health Rating if desired.