Chemistry Resources for Teachers
In This Issue
Cape Cod Science Cafe
FREE Resources for Teachers
Illustrated Poetry Contest
High School Science Teacher Workshop


National Chemistry Week on Cape Cod 2013 is
brought to you by the Cape & Islands  Boy Scouts Council of America, the Northeastern Section of the American Chemical Society and the Environmental Chemistry Division of the American Chemical Society. 
When
Sat. Oct. 26, 2013 1pm-5pm
Where
Camp Greenough, Yarmouthport
For
K-12 & families
Cape Cod Science Cafe presents at this event:  
Science Career Pathways by local scientists ideal for grades 8-12 & adults
High School Science Series at the 
Museum of Science Boston during National Chemistry Week: bring your students for FREE
 
  • Free; Requires advance registration 
  • Call: 617-723-2500
FREE Busing for 75 students per school to attend is available.
More info here
Contact me today if you want to participate in the Cape Cod National Chemistry Week event by staffing a hands-on science table with an energy related theme. 

Looking ahead:
 We have a followup Cape Cod Science Cafe K-12 event planned for March 29, 2014: Chemists Celebrate Earth Day on Cape Cod.

Let me know if you'd like to participate with an outreach table: the theme is water or if you wish to speak at this event.


Like us on Facebook 
 
                                       
September 2013 Edition 
SE MASS STEM EXPO: Resources from the American Chemical Society with Jennifer Maclachlan

Greetings!
  
I met you last Spring at the Southeastern Massachusetts STEM Resources for Teachers expo hosted by Bridgewater State University. Please find the links to the American Chemical Society resources for teachers below and here is the Chemistry Ambassadors program information. Note the deadlines for the Illustated Poetry Contest (received by 10/16) and the High School Teacher Workshop signup (reserve your spot and pay $20 fee by 10/4) as they are rapidly approaching! 
 
Additionally, I would like to invite you to join us at a special meeting of the Northeastern Section of the American Chemical Society (NESACS) that we are having Thursday October 3, 2013 at U Mass Dartmouth. Since our monthly NESACS meetings normally take place in the Greater Boston area, we applied for some grant money to host a meeting in SE MASS as well as in New Hampshire. Our guest lecturer is Madeleine Jacobs, the CEO and Executive Director of the American Chemical Society and she will be speaking on "Everything you wanted to know about the ACS but were afraid to ask". This a FREE event but seating is limited so we're requiring an RSVP. Bring a friend and meet, network and socialize with  some local area chemists and scientists. This is a link to more information about this special event. This is a link to the RSVP. Hope to see you there!
Free Resources for Elementary, Middle and High School Teachers from the American Chemical Society
 
ELEMENTARY AND MIDDLE SCHOOL
Hands-on Science Activities for Students, Gr. 2-5
www.acs.org/kids
Turn classrooms (or kitchens) into science labs with more than 140 hands-on activities that use household materials. Activities, puzzles, interactive articles, and chemist interviews help young scientists get an early start.
Inquiry in Action-Science Teaching Guide, Gr. 3-6
www.inquiryinaction.org
Download the entire book for free or purchase a hard copy. Written for teachers and aligned with state standards, lessons cover chemistry-related physical science concepts commonly taught in grades 3-6. Hands-on activities use household materials to explore common phenomena so students realize that science is part of their lives.
Middle School Chemistry: Big Ideas about the Very Small, Gr. 6-8
www.middleschoolchemistry.com
This free curriculum can be used in its entirety or as a supplement to teach middle schoolers about the world of atoms and molecules. Hands-on experiences, molecular animations, and lessons which build on one another help students develop a thorough understanding of basic chemistry concepts.
ALL   AGES
Classroom Safety
www.acs.org/safety
Recommendations by chemical safety experts help you identify hazards before they become accidents. Find out how to ensure that science activities and experiments are safe f
Podcasts and Videos Featuring Current Events in Chemistry
www.acs.org/bytesizescience
An all-ages trip to the frontiers of knowledge, Bytesize Science translates scientific discoveries into intriguing stories about food, medicine, and much more.
Classroom Chemistry Celebrations
www.acs.org/ncw and www.acs.org/earthday
Celebrate chemistry twice a year with free hands-on activities, articles, puzzles and more. National Chemistry Week 2012 is Oct. 21-27, which includes Mole Day on Oct. 23, and Earth Day is April 22.
HIGH SCHOOL
ChemClub
www.acs.org/chemclub
ACS chemistry clubs for high school students provides free resources for teachers who plan or advise the chemistry clubs in their schools.

ChemMatters
www.acs.org/chemmatters
A magazine for first-year high school chemistry courses that helps students discover how chemistry works in their everyday lives, while boosting chemistry literacy.

Chemistry Landmark Lesson Plans
www.acs.org/landmarks/lessonplans
Based on material from the ACS National Historic Chemical Landmarks program, these lessons, reading materials, videos and student activities are designed as ready-to-go, inquiry-based student activities, easily implemented by a high school chemistry teacher or his/her substitute. They also integrate science and history to provide a more holistic perspective of advances in both fields.
Global Challenges / Chemistry Solutions
www.acs.org/GlobalChallenges
These ACS podcasts focus on some of the 21st Century's most daunting challenges-in areas such as clean water, adequate food supplies, national security, renewable energy sources, and climate change-and how cutting-edge chemistry matters in the quest for solutions. Subscribe at iTunes.
Science Elements
www.acs.org/pressroom
A podcast series that makes cutting-edge scientific discoveries from ACS journals available to a broad public audience. Subscribe at iTunes.
Chemistry Olympiad
www.acs.org/olympiad
A multi-tiered competition that brings together the world's most talented high school students to test their knowledge and skills in chemistry.
ACS Scholars Program
www.acs.org/scholars
An undergraduate scholarship program for students from targeted minority groups majoring in and planning a career in the chemical sciences.
Project SEED
www.acs.org/projectseed
Open doors for economically disadvantaged students to experience what it's like to be a chemist. Students entering their junior or senior year in high school are given a rare chance to work alongside scientist-mentors on research projects in industrial, academic, and federal laboratories, discovering new career paths.
ACS-Hach Teaching Scholarships and Grants
www.acs.org/funding
Available to teachers, institutions, and second career teachers, ACS-Hach awards support ideas to transform classroom learning and chemistry educators.
PBS' 'Hunting the Elements' Television show and educational materials
http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/nova/physics/hunting-elements.html
NOVA's "Hunting the Elements" is an engaging look at how the elements shape our world. The related classroom resources allow educators to explore the periodic table in detail with their students-from its basic structure and properties to the sometimes volatile behavior of specific elements. Among the many resources are "name that element," a downloadable element iPad App and a classroom poster.

The Northeastern Section of the ACS is participating in the 

ACS National Illustrated Poem Contest.

 

Details are outlined below.

National Chemistry Week 2013 Poetry Contest - Energy:  Now and Forever.
 Students in grades K-12 may participate.

For additional information about the poetry contest, see this link.

Poems may be in any style (i.e. haiku, limerick, ode, ABC, free verse, end rhyme, blank verse, sonnet) but must not be longer than 40 words.

All illustrated poems must be received with a complete entry form by October 16, 2013 to: 

Christine Jaworek-Lopes

 Emmanuel College

 400 The Fenway

Boston, MA 02115


The Northeastern Section of the American Chemical Society (NESACS) and the Education Committee of the Northeastern Section invite high school chemistry teachers to this program.
Photo by M.Z. Hoffman

Keynote Address: "Energy: Now and Forever?"
Burlington High School
Burlington, MA
Wednesday, October 16, 2013, 3:30 pm - 8 pm
3:30-4:00 Registration and refreshments
4:00-4:25 Welcome and overview
4:30-6:15 Workshops
6:15-8:00 
Dinner and keynote address
"Energy: Now and Forever?"
(Jerry A. Bell - Faculty Associate in the Department of Chemistry, University of Wisconsin-Madison)
This program will help connect high school teachers with the numerous education resources that are available from the American Chemical Society.
Four simultaneous hands-on workshops will illustrate these resources:
  • Artificial Photosynthesis: A Workshop on Solar Cell Design (Dr. Jonathan Rochford, UMass Boston)
  • Hands-on Climate Change Science for Your Classroom (Dr. Jerry A. Bell, ACS)
  • Inquiring Minds Want to Know: Recent Lab Practicals from the US National Chemistry Olympiad (Mr. Steven Lantos, Brookline High School)
  • TBD (Dr. Deyang Qu, UMass Boston)
The deadline for registration is Friday, October 4, 2013. The registration fee is $20 and is non-refundable after October 7th. Workshop and program related materials, dinner, a one-year subscription to ChemMatters, and a certificate for three hours of Professional Development will be provided to all workshop participants.
For additional information, contact Dr. Marietta Schwartz, Chair, Education Committee, NESACS: 617-287-6146 or marietta.schwartz@umb.edu.

Jerry A. Bell
 
Jerry A. Bell is a Faculty Associate in the Department of Chemistry, University of Wisconsin-Madison where he works with the Wisconsin Initiative for Science Literacy (WISL). He taught at the University of California-Riverside (1962-67) and Simmons College (1967-93; awarded Emeritus status 2010), before joining the American Association for the Advancement of Science as Director for Science, Mathematics, and Technology Education Programs in the Education and Human Resources Directorate (1992-99) and then the American Chemical Society (ACS) as Senior Scientist in the Education Division (1999-2009).
He was Chief Editor for the ACS textbook, Chemistry. During 1984-86 he served as Director of the Division of Teacher Preparation and Enhancement in the Directorate for Science and Engineering Education at the National Science Foundation. His major professional interest has been science (chemical) education at all levels, especially the use of hands-on approaches to teaching and learning. He has been on the instructional staff and/or directed workshops and institutes for science teachers at all levels and continues to enjoy these activities. He Chairs the ACS Presidential Climate Science Working Group that developed the ACS Climate Science Toolkit, www.acs.org/climatescience.

ABSTRACT
Energy: Now and Forever?
Jerry A. Bell
Wisconsin Initiative for Science Literacy
Department of Chemistry
University of Wisconsin-Madison
Simmons College (Emeritus)

The high standard of living we enjoy as a consequence of the Industrial Revolution requires an enormous input of energy. Most of this energy is produced by burning fossil fuels, which has added 800 billion metric tons of carbon dioxide to the atmosphere. This is 40% more than the pre-industrial level and has increased the atmospheric greenhouse effect that is essential for life as we know it. We are now conducting a vast, uncontrolled geoengineering experiment that is trapping solar energy at a rate equivalent to the energy released by four Hiroshima-size atomic explosions every second. See the ACS Climate Science Toolkit at, www.acs.org/climatescience. The experimental results include a warming atmosphere and oceans, melting of ice on land and water, rising sea levels, more weather extremes, and an acidifying ocean. The future holds more of the same that will be exacerbated by further additions of carbon dioxide. The science clearly calls for replacing fossil fuel energy with sustainable alternatives, ultimately solar energy in all its manifestations. We will explore what each of us can do now to help assure that there is a "forever".


Thank you for taking the time to read my newsletter today and I invite you to connect with me socially using the icon links below.
 

Like us on Facebook  Follow us on Twitter  View our profile on LinkedIn Find us on Google+ Find us on Pinterest View our videos on YouTube Visit our blog 

Sincerely,
Public Relations Committee, NESACS
Managing Director of the Sandwich-based PID Analyzers, LLC