Influence of The Chemical Bond Approach and the Chemical Educational Materials Study on the New York Regents Examination in High School Chemistry*

1969 ◽  
Vol 69 (1) ◽  
pp. 53-58 ◽  
Author(s):  
Gerald Osborn
PEDIATRICS ◽  
1969 ◽  
Vol 44 (4) ◽  
pp. 629-630
Author(s):  
Malcolm A. Holliday

Wilhelm Frisell was an admiring student of William Mansfield Clark, who was a scholar capable of bringing to medical students and interested physicians some of the less familiar concepts of physical chemistry in an imaginative and appealing manner that did not do violence to the principles he was dealing with. In the present book, the author has greatly narrowed his scope to the field of acid-base chemistry. Starting from the assumption that his students have yet to be introduced to high school chemistry, he continues to write in this vein thereafter.


2009 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yeşim Çapa Aydın ◽  
Esen Uzuntiryaki

Author(s):  
Adam G. L. Schafer ◽  
Victoria M. Borland ◽  
Ellen J. Yezierski

Even when chemistry teachers’ beliefs about assessment design align with literature-cited best practices, barriers can prevent teachers from enacting those beliefs when developing day-to-day assessments. In this paper, the relationship between high school chemistry teachers’ self-generated “best practices” for developing formative assessments and the assessments they implement in their courses are examined. Results from a detailed evaluation of several high school chemistry formative assessments, learning goals, and learning activities reveal that assessment items are often developed to require well-articulated tasks but lack either alignment regarding representational level or employ only one representational level for nearly all assessment items. Implications for the development of a chemistry-specific method for evaluating alignment are presented as well as implications for high school chemistry assessment design.


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