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  Home > JCE Print > Journal of Chemical Education > Issues > 2007  > April  >
Chemical Education Today
Letters
Let's All Visit Mole City!
Mark W. Armstrong
Department of Chemistry and Physics, Blackburn College, Carlinville, IL 62626
Cover
April 2007
Vol. 84 No. 4
p. 596

Full Text
As a college professor who has just recently finished teaching stoichiometry in my General Chemistry class, I very much appreciated Addison Ault’s commentary, Mole City: A Stoichiometric Analogy (1). In fact, I plan to encourage my students to prepare maps on posters for extra credit using his plan.

I do find one small quibble. A stoichiometry problem need not start at the house of a Starting Material and end at the house of a Product. For example: How many grams (moles, liters, etc.) of oxygen are required to completely oxidize a given amount of iron? Both oxygen and iron reside in the houses of the Starting Materials (on the same side of Mole River), and yet one must cross the Mole Street Bridge (use the stoichiometric ratio) to solve the problem. I plan to ask my students to critique their maps and think of ways to include such problems.

Literature Cited

  1. Ault, A. Mole City: A Stoichiometric Analogy. J.Chem. Educ. 2006, 83, 1587–1588.

See author's reply.

More Information
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Citation
Armstrong, Mark W. J. Chem. Educ. 2007, 84, 596.
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Keywords
Analogies / Transfer; High School / Introductory Chemistry; Stoichiometry
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History
Created:
Last Updated:
3/6/2007
3/6/2007
  Home > JCE Print > Journal of Chemical Education > Issues > 2007  > April  > Page 596


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