LARN 076 C19D4

LARN 076 C19D4 Start the following in class: 1.  In your Journal Notebook write your journal entry on sheets of three holed 8.5 inch by 11 inch ruled paper.  In the upper right corner white space of each upward facing page, use a blue or black pen to write your hand in number within a circle followed by your name.  To the left of the marginal line, print J76A and circle it. Each journal entry should either be at least a paragraph of exemplary writing and penmanship concerning a single topic, or be a concept map relating chemistry terms. Begin each day’s paragraph with a topic sentence, follow with explained instances, and close with a focused summary statement. The required journal focus question J76A for today is An Arrhenius base is often the water solution of an ionically bonded molecule that when placed in contact with water, produces OH-(aq) ions as the only negatively charged ions.   How are these bases named? Add this note...
Read More

LARN 066 C17D2

LARN 066 C17D2 Start the following in class: 1. In your Journal Notebook write your journal entry on sheets of three holed 8.5 inch by 11 inch ruled paper. In the upper right corner white space of each upward facing page, use a blue or black pen to write your hand in number within a circle followed by your name. To the left of the marginal line, print J66 and circle it. For your journal entry J66, you are to construct a concept map.  Please turn to page 246 in your text and, in your learning journal, construct a concept map relating the nine terms listed at the bottom of the page.  Connect related terms with arrows such that the subject of each sentence explaining the relationship is at the tail of the arrow, the verb describing the relationship of the subject to the predicate is written beside the arrow, and the arrow head is touching the oval of the term which is the object...
Read More

LARN 057 C15D1

LARN 057 C15D1 ATTENTION:  If you have not already done so, locate three (3) shiny United States pennies that were minted after 1982, the shinier the better, to experiment with. Bring these pennies in to transform two of them into souvenir alloys celebrating your taking chemistry this year!  The pennies will be treated to form souvenirs of chemistry class. If the pennies you bring in are dull, you will have the clean them. Store them temporarily in your grommeted, three hole zipper pen case until it is time to do the laboratory activity. Start the following in class: 1. Go to the web site at http://www.visionlearning.com/reg/login.php, log on into the course+section for which you are registered, and select the module entitled Chemical Bonding.  Read this module as if you were creating an SQ5R or PQ5R study guide for it, but are title it: In Class:  Chemical Bonding.  Click here to read  the full instructions for what you need to do.  When you are finished, click...
Read More