Difference between revisions of "Fast-Paced High School Chemistry"

From RealCTY
Jump to navigation Jump to search
m
m
 
(18 intermediate revisions by 6 users not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
 +
{{Infobox
 +
| title  = Fast-Paced High School Chemistry
 +
| header1 = Science Course
 +
| label2 = Course Code | data2 = [[Fast-Paced High School Chemistry|CHEM]]
 +
| label3 = Year Opened | data3 = 1982
 +
| label4 = Sites Offered | data4 = [[BRI]], [[LOS]]
 +
| label5 = Previously Offered | data5 = [[ASU]], [[CLA]], [[CLN]], [[CAR]], [[HKU]], [[LAN]], [[HKG]], [[JHU]], [[KNE]], [[LOU]], [[RED]], [[SAR]], [[SUN]], [[SRF]], [[STM]], [[UNI]]
 +
}}
 
{{CTY Courses}}
 
{{CTY Courses}}
[[Fast-Paced High School Chemistry]] is a Science course in the CTY program.  It requires previous enrollment in Algebra I, and completion of [[INBS]] is recommended.  It is intended as a means to get a head start on sophomore chemistry, or to skip to AP Chemistry.  Its course code is CHEM, and it is offered at [[Carlisle]], [[Lancaster]], [[Los Angeles]], [[Saratoga Springs]], and [[Seattle]]. It was previously offered at [[Baltimore]] and [[San Rafael]].
 
 
 
==Course Description==
 
==Course Description==
 
+
This course covers material normally included in a year-long introductory course in high school chemistry, which is usually a prerequisite for AP® or IB Chemistry. It explores physical and chemical properties, the periodic table, the atom and atomic theory, chemical bonding, chemical reactions and stoichiometry, solutions, thermodynamics, acids and bases, kinetics, equilibrium, and some organic chemistry. After learning these concepts, you and your classmates will work in the lab to determine the percent composition of a compound; compare theoretical and percent yield in a chemical reaction; measure the molar mass of a gaseous compound; explore factors that affect the rate of a reaction; and conduct acid-base titrations. Lab time constitutes at least 20 hours of the course. This course is intended for students who have completed grade 8 or above. If you’ve just completed grade 7, you should take CTY’s Introduction to the Biomedical Sciences before taking this course.  If you haven’t yet completed Algebra 1, consider reviewing systems of equations, solving and graphing linear equations, functions, exponents, quadratic expressions and equations, and interval notations before the course begins.
CTY Chemistry covers the equivalent of a high school Chemistry course, and, as with other CTY courses, also covers some topics included in AP Bio. The class is very much fast paced, and is also lab-driven; there are at least two labs almost every day.
 
  
 
==Class History==
 
==Class History==
  
At LMU, Chemistry has been taught for several years by Mr. Dobrenen (Mr. D), sometimes with TA Sonya.
+
===Lancaster===
 +
Prior to '92 at Lancaster, the course was taught by Karl Brehmer, and was called Breher Chem. This class was so hard-core that students had to work through mealtimes and both activity periods just to keep up. In fact, it was traditional for the RA for the hall where most of the Brehmer Chem students lived to wait until after the HRA came around, then knock on the students doors to let them know they could turn their lights back on and get back to work.
  
In some unnamed site, the course was taught by Dallik and TA'd by Britt during 07.2.
+
Though students tended to walk around like zombies a lot (frequently having conversations like: "What are you taking?" "Nothing! I swear!" "No, what CLASS are you taking?" "Oh, Brehmer Chem." "Yeah, I figured.") they did learn. In those 3 weeks, they learned a full year of high school chem. Not select topics in, but each and every topic and lab. There were some complaints, and around '91 the workload was scaled way back. Brehmer stopped teaching shortly thereafter.
 
 
Prior to 92 at Lancaster, the course was taught by Karl Brehmer, and was called Breher Chem. This class was so hard-core that students had to work through mealtimes and both activity periods just to keep up. In fact, it was traditional for the RA for the hall where most of the Brehmer Chem students lived to wait until after the HRA came around, then knock on the students doors to let them know they could turn their lights back on and get back to work.
 
 
 
Though students tended to walk around like zombies a lot (frequently having conversations like: "What are you taking?" "Nothing! I swear!" "No, what CLASS are you taking?" "Oh, Brehmer Chem." "Yeah, I figured.") they did learn. In those 3 weeks, they learned a full year of high school chem. Not select topics in, but each and every topic and lab. There were some complaints, and around 91 the workload was scaled way back, and Brehmer stopped teaching shortly thereafter.
 
  
 
Frequently compared to the "Closet People" of Carlisle's Woogie (sp?), those who survived Brehmer Chem might not have had as much fun as their peers, but their sense of accomplishment and the bond that they shared made it all worthwhile. And would last a lifetime.
 
Frequently compared to the "Closet People" of Carlisle's Woogie (sp?), those who survived Brehmer Chem might not have had as much fun as their peers, but their sense of accomplishment and the bond that they shared made it all worthwhile. And would last a lifetime.
  
Students from SAR.08.2 enjoyed shouting "CHEMISTRY!!!" with their TA Brian Danielak... and continued this the following year, despite the fact that they were no longer in the class.  
+
Students from '''CHEM.B.LAN.15.1''' know that they need to TRUST IN CHONG, and that CHRISmas may only be three weeks but it will CARRIE on in their hearts forever.
  
Students from JHU.11.2 were once held captive in lab for 9 hours (not all at the same time of course) dying their own shirts with dye they made themselves. Although their legs were incredibly sore from lack of seating, and they were so cold that they were surprised they didn't suffer from frostbite/hypothermia, they were pleased with their (mostly) CTY appropriate shirt designs. Whether or not a certain shirt was an merely an accident that resulted from the dye running from an original design of a tie on the front of a shirt or not is still a mystery to the class.
+
Students from '''CHEM.B.LAN.16.1''' know that they are all pyromaniacs and that the mitochondria is the powerhouse of the cell (despite it being a chemistry class). They all deserve a paper plate award for being the best kindergartners on crack, and know that there is a higher probability of you getting left behind at break than there is of Ms Holt playing the Mii remix song during a lab.
  
Students from SAR.14.1 were devastated to see Fred the gummy bear being blown up in a test tube by their instructor. Fred shall forever rest in peace.
+
Currently, at Lancaster, 'Dr. B' teaches Fast-Paced High School Chemistry (as of Lan 19.1). She is native to Fayetteville, North Carolina and has over 20 years of teaching experience.
[[Category:Courses]]
 
  
Students from CHEM.B.LAN.15.1 know that they need to TRUST IN CHONG, and that CHRISmas may only be three weeks but it will CARRIE on in their hearts forever.
+
===Saratoga===
 +
Students from '''SAR.08.2''' enjoyed shouting "CHEMISTRY!!!" with their TA Brian Danielak... and continued this the following year, despite the fact that they were no longer in the class.  
  
Students from CHEM.B.LOS.15.1 were known to shout CHEM CHEM CHEM CHEM/CHEM B CHEM B CHEM B whenever they won a competition (quite often). One of the students was also referred to as "that Korean supermodel" by a student in another class. Some very sexy people attempted to bring back old traditions from this class and succeeded to some extent. They also pulled mad chicks.
+
Students from '''SAR.14.1''' were devastated to see Fred the gummy bear being blown up in a test tube by their instructor. Fred shall forever rest in peace.
  
Students from CHEM.B.LAN.16.1 know that they are all pyromaniacs and that the mitochondria is the powerhouse of the cell (despite it being a chemistry class). They all deserve a paper plate award for being the best kindergarteners on crack, and know that there is a higher probability of you getting left behind at break than there is of Ms Holt playing the mii remix song during a lab. 
+
Students from '''SAR 19.1''' got rainbow glasses for some lab in place of spectroscopes or spectrometers or whatever, and those glasses were honestly pretty cool and people wore them outside of class, even at dances. Some people had the big brain idea of putting on multiple at once and he had like 7 of them on, was pretty funny
  
== What To Expect/Advice From Former Students ==  
+
===Baltimore===
"If you're taking this class, be sure you have a calculator."
+
Students from '''JHU.11.2''' were once held captive in lab for 9 hours (not all at the same time of course) dying their own shirts with dye they made themselves. Although their legs were incredibly sore from lack of seating, and they were so cold that they were surprised they didn't suffer from frostbite/hypothermia, they were pleased with their (mostly) CTY appropriate shirt designs. Whether or not a certain shirt was an merely an accident that resulted from the dye running from an original design of a tie on the front of a shirt or not is still a mystery to the class.
  
"Bring pennies, especially if being taught by Mrs. Provenza."
+
===Los Angeles===
 
+
At LMU, Chemistry has been taught for several years by Mr. Dobrenen (Mr. D), sometimes with TA Sonya.
"You will want to bring a camera with video capabilities."
 
 
 
"The first day might be a bit bad because they give you the pretest, which of course you're supposed to know nothing about, and you may feel dumb afterwards."
 
 
 
"The class takes a '''lot''' of notes, mostly off PowerPoint presentations."
 
  
"This course moves very, very quickly, so if you feel overwhelmed try your best to relax."
+
Students from '''CHEM.B.LOS.15.1''' were known to shout "CHEM CHEM CHEM CHEM/CHEM B CHEM B CHEM B" whenever they won a competition (quite often). One of the students was also referred to as "that Korean supermodel" by a student in another class. Some very sexy people attempted to bring back old traditions from this class and succeeded to some extent. They also pulled mad chicks.
  
"The labs are fun, because stuff catches fire and blows up - a lot."
+
===Carlisle===
 +
Students from Chemistry A 19.2 worshipped stoichiometry, chromium's correct pronunciation, and Peppa Pig.
  
"There is a high probability your instructor will let you know before you blow stuff up. Probably."
+
==Advice==
  
"There is a high chance of frisbees landing on rooftops and in roads during break."
+
*If you're taking this class, be sure you have a calculator.
 +
*Bring pennies, especially if being taught by Mrs. Provenza.
 +
*You will want to bring a camera with video capabilities.
 +
*The first day might be a bit bad because they give you the pretest, which of course you're supposed to know nothing about, and you may feel dumb afterward.
 +
*The class takes a ''lot'' of notes, mostly off of PowerPoint presentations.
 +
*This course moves very, very quickly, so if you feel overwhelmed try your best to relax.
 +
*The labs are fun, because stuff catches fire and blows up - a lot.
 +
*There is a high probability your instructor will let you know before you blow stuff up. Probably.
 +
*There is a high chance of Frisbees landing on rooftops and in roads during break.
  
[[Category: Baltimore (JHU)]]
+
[[Category: Courses]]
[[Category: Carlisle]]
+
[[Category: Bristol]]
[[Category: Lancaster]]
 
 
[[Category: Los Angeles (LMU)]]
 
[[Category: Los Angeles (LMU)]]
[[Category: San Rafael]]
 
[[Category: Saratoga Springs (Skidmore)]]
 
[[Category: Seattle]]
 

Latest revision as of 09:34, 22 March 2023

Fast-Paced High School Chemistry
Science Course
Course CodeCHEM
Year Opened1982
Sites OfferedBRI, LOS
Previously OfferedASU, CLA, CLN, CAR, HKU, LAN, HKG, JHU, KNE, LOU, RED, SAR, SUN, SRF, STM, UNI
Part of a series on
Realcty logo 20060831.png
CTY Courses
Category · Template · CAA Courses
Sites
Baltimore · Carlisle · Lancaster · Los Angeles · Saratoga Springs · Seattle
Humanities
Logic: PoR
International Politics ·
Ethics · Existentialism
Philosophy of Mind
Cognitive Psychology · Linguistics
Dissent
Newton, Darwin, and Einstein
The Art and Science of Filmmaking
Beyond the Binary: A Cultural History of Gender
Laws and Orders: Legal Systems Around the World
Writing
Writing Your World
Fiction and Poetry
Utopias and Dystopias
Persuasion and Propaganda
The Art of Fiction
Math
Probability and Game Theory
Number Theory · Mathematical Logic
Cryptology · Combinatorics and Graph Theory
Topology
Economics
Macroeconomics and the Global Economy
Fundamentals of Microeconomics
Computer Science
Data Structures and Algorithms
Fundamentals of Computer Science
Science
FPHS Biology · FPHS Chemistry · FPHS Physics
Astrophysics
Paleobiology · Genetics · Neuroscience
Investigations in Engineering
Introduction to Biomedical Sciences · Electrical Engineering
Special Relativity
Princeton & Berkeley
Global Politics: Human Rights and Justice
Human Nature and Technology
Politics and Film · Epidemiology
The Mathematics of Competitive Behavior
Science, Technology and Public Policy
Race and Politics · Politics in the Middle East
The Global Environment
Playing God: The Ethics of Human Subjects Research
You Will Be Offended: Satire, Comedy, and Public Discourse
Defunct Courses
Beginning Ancient Greek · German 1
German 2
Latin 2
French 1 · French 2
Great Revolutions
American History
Modern European History · Eastern European History
Music Theory
History of Western Art
Renaissance Art
Introduction to American Studies: Race and Class
Medieval Art
Twentieth Century Art · Gandhi's India
American Studies: The Sixties · Women and US Social Reform
American Studies: The Harlem Renaissance
Intermediate Ancient Greek
Islam · The Asian Pacific Rim
Russian History
TCE: Literature and the Arts · TCE: Popular Culture
The Crafting of Drama
The Crafting of Poetry · TCE: Shakespeare
TCE: Science Fiction
TCE: Beyond the Ring and the Wardrobe
Advanced Mathematical Modeling
Advanced Mathematical Reasoning
Statistics · Calculus: A Conceptual Approach
Topics in Precalculus
Set Theory · Digital Logic
Theoretical Foundations of Computer Science
Introduction to Laboratory Sciences · Archaeology
Ecology
Microbiology · Selected Topics in Advanced Biology
Selected Topics in Advanced Chemistry
Selected Topics in Advanced Physics · Physical Anthropology
Advanced Physics: Mechanics
Scientific Investigations: St. Mary's River · Genomics
Volcanoes
Etymologies · Oceanography: The Hawaiian Pacific
Life Cycle of an Island: Hawaii
The History of Disease · The Critical Essay: Film
Wicked Art: Pictures, Pixels, and Pens
Latin I
Goodwives and Witches: Women in Colonial America
Freaks and Geeks in Popular Media
The Digital Revolution
Advanced Robotics
Theory of Computation
Individually Paced Mathematics Sequence
Service, Leadership & Community Transformation
Advanced Cryptology
Law and Politics in US History
Intro to Organic Chemistry

Course Description

This course covers material normally included in a year-long introductory course in high school chemistry, which is usually a prerequisite for AP® or IB Chemistry. It explores physical and chemical properties, the periodic table, the atom and atomic theory, chemical bonding, chemical reactions and stoichiometry, solutions, thermodynamics, acids and bases, kinetics, equilibrium, and some organic chemistry. After learning these concepts, you and your classmates will work in the lab to determine the percent composition of a compound; compare theoretical and percent yield in a chemical reaction; measure the molar mass of a gaseous compound; explore factors that affect the rate of a reaction; and conduct acid-base titrations. Lab time constitutes at least 20 hours of the course. This course is intended for students who have completed grade 8 or above. If you’ve just completed grade 7, you should take CTY’s Introduction to the Biomedical Sciences before taking this course.  If you haven’t yet completed Algebra 1, consider reviewing systems of equations, solving and graphing linear equations, functions, exponents, quadratic expressions and equations, and interval notations before the course begins.

Class History

Lancaster

Prior to '92 at Lancaster, the course was taught by Karl Brehmer, and was called Breher Chem. This class was so hard-core that students had to work through mealtimes and both activity periods just to keep up. In fact, it was traditional for the RA for the hall where most of the Brehmer Chem students lived to wait until after the HRA came around, then knock on the students doors to let them know they could turn their lights back on and get back to work.

Though students tended to walk around like zombies a lot (frequently having conversations like: "What are you taking?" "Nothing! I swear!" "No, what CLASS are you taking?" "Oh, Brehmer Chem." "Yeah, I figured.") they did learn. In those 3 weeks, they learned a full year of high school chem. Not select topics in, but each and every topic and lab. There were some complaints, and around '91 the workload was scaled way back. Brehmer stopped teaching shortly thereafter.

Frequently compared to the "Closet People" of Carlisle's Woogie (sp?), those who survived Brehmer Chem might not have had as much fun as their peers, but their sense of accomplishment and the bond that they shared made it all worthwhile. And would last a lifetime.

Students from CHEM.B.LAN.15.1 know that they need to TRUST IN CHONG, and that CHRISmas may only be three weeks but it will CARRIE on in their hearts forever.

Students from CHEM.B.LAN.16.1 know that they are all pyromaniacs and that the mitochondria is the powerhouse of the cell (despite it being a chemistry class). They all deserve a paper plate award for being the best kindergartners on crack, and know that there is a higher probability of you getting left behind at break than there is of Ms Holt playing the Mii remix song during a lab.

Currently, at Lancaster, 'Dr. B' teaches Fast-Paced High School Chemistry (as of Lan 19.1). She is native to Fayetteville, North Carolina and has over 20 years of teaching experience.

Saratoga

Students from SAR.08.2 enjoyed shouting "CHEMISTRY!!!" with their TA Brian Danielak... and continued this the following year, despite the fact that they were no longer in the class.

Students from SAR.14.1 were devastated to see Fred the gummy bear being blown up in a test tube by their instructor. Fred shall forever rest in peace.

Students from SAR 19.1 got rainbow glasses for some lab in place of spectroscopes or spectrometers or whatever, and those glasses were honestly pretty cool and people wore them outside of class, even at dances. Some people had the big brain idea of putting on multiple at once and he had like 7 of them on, was pretty funny

Baltimore

Students from JHU.11.2 were once held captive in lab for 9 hours (not all at the same time of course) dying their own shirts with dye they made themselves. Although their legs were incredibly sore from lack of seating, and they were so cold that they were surprised they didn't suffer from frostbite/hypothermia, they were pleased with their (mostly) CTY appropriate shirt designs. Whether or not a certain shirt was an merely an accident that resulted from the dye running from an original design of a tie on the front of a shirt or not is still a mystery to the class.

Los Angeles

At LMU, Chemistry has been taught for several years by Mr. Dobrenen (Mr. D), sometimes with TA Sonya.

Students from CHEM.B.LOS.15.1 were known to shout "CHEM CHEM CHEM CHEM/CHEM B CHEM B CHEM B" whenever they won a competition (quite often). One of the students was also referred to as "that Korean supermodel" by a student in another class. Some very sexy people attempted to bring back old traditions from this class and succeeded to some extent. They also pulled mad chicks.

Carlisle

Students from Chemistry A 19.2 worshipped stoichiometry, chromium's correct pronunciation, and Peppa Pig.

Advice

  • If you're taking this class, be sure you have a calculator.
  • Bring pennies, especially if being taught by Mrs. Provenza.
  • You will want to bring a camera with video capabilities.
  • The first day might be a bit bad because they give you the pretest, which of course you're supposed to know nothing about, and you may feel dumb afterward.
  • The class takes a lot of notes, mostly off of PowerPoint presentations.
  • This course moves very, very quickly, so if you feel overwhelmed try your best to relax.
  • The labs are fun, because stuff catches fire and blows up - a lot.
  • There is a high probability your instructor will let you know before you blow stuff up. Probably.
  • There is a high chance of Frisbees landing on rooftops and in roads during break.