Title  : NSF 94-19  Innovation and Change in the Chemistry Curriculum
Type   : Report
NSF Org: EHR / DUE
Date   : December 31, 1993
File   : nsf9419


_____________________________________
Division of Undergraduate Education
Directorate for Education and Human Resources
National Science Foundation
December, 1993
               INNOVATION AND CHANGE
                                   IN THE
               CHEMISTRY CURRICULUM
                              Co-Chairs:
                    Seyhan Ege University of Michigan
               Orville Chapman University of California, Los
Angeles
     May 7-8, 1992 Washington, DC
                              DEDICATION
On behalf of the participants of this workshop, we wish to dedicate this report 
to the memory of two people, Paul Gassman and Kenneth Hancock, who have 
contributed greatly to our profession and who provided leadership and wisdom 
during our deliberations.

          Orville Chapman                Seyhan Ege
                                        TABLE OF CONTENTS
Workshop agenda  ----------------------------------------
Executive Summary ----------------------------------------
Panel A - Fostering Instructional Improvement By
          Galvanizing the Chemical Community ----------
Panel B - Bringing Research Closer to the Classroom ---
-
Panel C - Assessing Instructional Innovation; Improving
the Preparation of Chemistry Teachers; Assessing Student Learning 
------------------
--
Panel D - Stimulating Instructional Innovations and
          Improving the Speed, Quality, Convenience, and
          Reliability of Dissemination -----------------
Panel E - Bringing Cutting-Edge Technology in Computers
          and Instruments into the Classroom ------------
Presentations by the Co-Chairs
          Orville L. Chapman -----------------------------
          Seyhan N. Ege -----------------------------------
Plenary Lecture
Science Education, Who Needs It?
               Norman Hackerman --------------------------
Workshop Participants ------------------------------------------
                    WORKSHOP ON INNOVATION AND CHANGE
                         IN THE CHEMISTRY CURRICULUM
     DuPont Plaza Hotel 1500 Rhode Island Avenue
Washington, DC
                                                  May 7-8, 1992
Thursday, May 7, 1992
     8:00am         Registration
     9:00am         Introductory Remarks:
               Robert Watson, Director, Division of
Undergraduate Education
          Kenneth Hancock, Director, Division of Chemistry
     9:20am    Colloquium Agenda and Goals
          Orville Chapman, Workshop co-chair, University of California Los
          Angeles
          Seyhan Ege, Workshop co-chair, University of Michigan
     10:00am   Break
     10:15am   Discussion Groups
          Panel A -Fostering Instructional Improvement By Galvanizing the
          Chemical Community
          Panel B -Bringing Research Closer to the Classroom
          Panel C -Assessing Instructional Innovation; Improving the 
          Preparation of
          Chemistry Teachers; Assessing Student Learning
          Panel D -Stimulating Instructional Innovations and Improving the 
          Speed,
          Quality, Convenience, and Reliability of Dissemination
          Panel E -Bringing Cutting-Edge TEchnology in Computers and
          Instruments into the Classroom
     Noon   Lunch
     1:15pm    Plenary short presentations
          Introduction by Co-Chairs
          Robert Kozma - Models for innovation and change.
          Douglas Lapp - A functioning institute for science at the precollege 
          level.
          James Spencer - ACS Division of Chemical Education Task Force on
          General Chemistry.
          John Moore - Economics of new texts, media, and instruments.
     3:00pm    Break
     3:15pm    Group Discussions
     5:30pm    Reception
     6:30pm    Dinner
     7:30pm    Norman Hackerman, University of Texas
          "Science Education, Who Needs It?"
Friday, May 9, 1992
     8:25am    Discussion group one page summaries
     8:30am    Models for change in other
disciplines
          Engineering Coalitions
Calculus REform
          Physics IUPP project
     9:45am    Break
     10:00am   Discussion groups
     Noon Lunch
     1:15pm    Concluding Plenary Session
Reports from Discussion groups Remarks by Co-Chairs
     3:00 Adjournment

"...the culture of our
community must change to
value contributions to
education in the same way it
values research. "
Panel A:
Fostering Instructional
Improvement by Galvanizing
the Chemical Community
 "We urge you (the faculty) to
bring research into your
classrooms by enabling
students to experience
themselves as professionals
by designing laboratory
courses to parallel research, including the use of modern instrumentation to 
generate
data in the solution of real
problems, and emphasis on
both individual and team
research, (and by) allowing
time in the design of the
laboratory for students to
fail, to learn from their
mistakes and to repeat
experiments until meaningful
results are obtained. "
Panel B: Bringing Research
Closer to the Classroom
Panel C. Assessing
Instructional Innovation;
Improving the Preparation of
Chemistry Teachers;
Assessing Student learning.

"Our examinations focus on
the kinds of questions for
which there is a single
correct answer, rather than
those for which the correct
answer is unknown, or which
have more than one correct
answer. As a result we
construct an arbitrary
boundary between what we
do as scientists and what we
ask our students to do in
science courses...
All too often the effect of
assessment is so powerful
that it drives instruction,
trapping us in a particular
curriculum because we know
how to assess that mode of
student learning and no
other. "
"In chemistry, the current
methods of dissemination of instructional improvements
and innovations are slow,
ineffective and inadequate ... Chemical education needs
both new joumals and
electronic dissemination. "
"New technology opens
access to vast data bases and information systems at
relatively low cost, but
computational power has not
impacted, by and large, the
way we teach and the way we communicate with each
other."
Panel D: Stimulating
Instructional Innovations and Improving the Speed,
Convenience, and Reliability
of Dissemination
"New technology opens
access to vast data bases and information systems at
relatively low cost, but
computational power has not
impacted, by and large, the
way we teach and the way we communicate with each other.
"
Panel E. Bringing
Cutting-Edge Technology in
Computers and Instruments
into the Classroom
EXECUTIVE SUMMARY
     As our economic base changes from manufacturing to
information, we will experience radical changes in many social structures.
Of such structures, few are more conservative than education. Our
educational methods, rooted in the early middle ages, cannot serve the
dawning information age. Chemical education, as all education, must
metamorphose to meet the challenges of the future. This workshop on
"Innovation and Change in Chemical Instruction" was convened to discuss
how innovation arises in the chemical education community and how the
creativity that goes into innovation by individual faculty members or
departments can be communicated to and adopted by other faculty for the
renewal of education in the discipline in the same ways that research in
chemistry leads to the intellectual renewal of chemists.
     Five panels led by outstanding chemical educators,
representing two-year colleges, four-year colleges, comprehensive
universities, and research universities, considered key issues such as
fostering innovations, incorporating more research into both lecture and
laboratory courses, assessing student learning and innovations,
communicating innovations, and the new technology that is necessary for
effective change. Each of the panels put forth a series of recommen-
dations, which are presented after this summary.

          Despite the diversity of the panels and the differences in
their charges, common concerns emerged. We make five major recommendations to 
institutions of higher learning, professional societies, and to the National 
Science Foundation. 1. In rewarding and encouraging faculty, the value placed 
on teaching must be increased.
     Our society has little respect for those who teach. Nowhere is this
fact more evident than in our large research institutions. The University
of California faculty in rejecting the Pister Report ('Report ofthe
Universitywide Task Force on Faculty Rewards, K.S. Pister, Chair, June
26, 1991, Office of the President, University of California, Oakland,
California), which sought to equate teaching and research in faculty
evaluation, emphatically made the point: research dominates teaching. But
our universities are not alone; consider the number of research awards and
the number of education awards administered by the American Chemical
Society. We have a national science medal, but we have no national
science education medal. We have to face the facts; we do not value
teaching. Our reward structure shows just how little we value teaching.
If we want educational innovation, we must make clear statements to the
world that we value highly educational innovators.
     We call on the American Chemical Society to establish a major
     award for innovation in education. We further suggest that this
     award be named for Professor Paul Gassman.
     We call on the President and the Congress to establish a
     national science education medal.
2. We must give all of our students, whether they will become
scientists or not, a sense of professionalism and involvement, an
appreciation of the scientific method and how it impacts on public
discourse, and an understanding of research and the excitement of
exploration and discovery.
          Our introductory chemistry courses have focused on facts
and exercises. We do not incorporate into these courses the
crucial issues
that involve our students as citizens, issues where questions of science,
people, economics, ethics, and policy meet. Nor do students in our first
year courses get a sense of the vital and growing nature of our discipline.
Modern tools that give students access to computer data bases, molecular
modeling, and computational chemistry offer the means for student
exploration and discovery.
     We recommend that faculty open up their classrooms and
     laboratories to problembased instruction that allows students
     to participate in the kind of open-ended consideration of data
     that characterizes our research.
     As an extension of this, all undergraduates should have the
     opportunity to do research, including oral and written
     presentation of their results.
     We urge the National Science Foundation to support initiatives
     that develop means of interactive learning for students. These
     would involve development of new software and laboratory
     experiments, and faculty enhancement programs.
3. The methods we use for assessing our students and our teaching
must change so that they no longer focus our courses on the lowest
levels of learning and so that they provide us with the insight into our
methods and our tools that we need to drive change.
     In chemistry we test for facts and exercises. Our tests probe neither 
problem-solving skills nor  understanding, and therefore focus our courses on 
the two lowest levels of learning in Bloom's taxonomy of learning (Bloom, B.S., 
editor, Taxonomy of Educational Objectives I: Cognitive Domain, David McKay, 
New York, NY, 1956): rote learning and exercises. This focus robs our courses 
of research, inquiry, exploration, and discovery.
     Our assessment problems do not end with student assessment. Our
courses, our methods, our tools also need assessment. We do not have the
insights we need to achieve fundamental change, and yet we resist expert
and independent assessment of our courses. Why? Experts constantly
assess our research: every paper, every proposal. Constant assessment
hones our research skills.
     Change in methods of student assessment is long overdue. We
     recommend that we bring expert assessment of both our
     students and ourselves to chemical education. We need to have
     cognitive scientists, specialists in learning, who know how to
     probe and evaluate student learning, attitudes, understanding,
     and problem-solving skills, study our courses and our methods.
4. We must have new tools for the dissemination of innovation in
chemical education.
     Chemical research has devised many vehicles for rapid, thorough
communication of results. Only one journal, the Journal of Chemical
Education, which currently takes more than a year for publication after
accepting an article, serves chemical education exclusively. No vehicle for
rapid communication of innovation exists. Important information in the
allied fields of cognitive science and pedagogical research, published in
journals such as the Journal of College Science Teaching, the Journal of
Research in Science Teaching, and Cognition and Instruction, also must
be made more accessible to the chemical community. Chemical education
must learn from chemical research the value of thorough, rapid,
peer-reviewed publication.
     We recommend the creation of new tools for the rapid
     dissemination of
information about pedagogy and innovation, such as:
     electronic networks carrying publications, and bulletin boards.
     newsletters with up-todate news in cognitive science and
     pedagogical research.
     a review journal that summarizes and evaluates approaches to
     a particular topic, concept, or problem.
     a series that would do for chemical education what Organic
     Syntheses and Inorganic Syntheses have done for the research
     community.
5. We must create a new infrastructure that enables use of modern
methods and tools in our curriculum.
     We cannot overstate the extent to which our weak infrastructure in
science education limits instruction. Many faculty members still have no
access to electronic mail and a national network. The capacity to transmit
digital multimedia programs rapidly and interactively opens up the
possibility of sharing innovations from one end of the country to the other.
     Instruction that engages students at all levels in the processes of 
discovery requires modern instrumentation, and computers that deliver 
interactive multimedia programs that challange and stimulate them.  Only with 
such tools will we involve students in the exploration and discovery that 
characterizes modern science; test tubes and beakers no longer suffice.
     We call on the President and the Congress to fund and imple-
     ment the broad-band, fiber-optic network that the President
     has proposed.
     We call on academic officers to put computers on every faculty
     member's desk and to fund computers for student use.
     We call on the National Science Foundation and other funding
     agencies to recognize that we need modern tools and the
     infrastructure to support them, as well as mechanisms for
     updating the faculty on
the use of new tools and methods of
          modern science. PANEL A
FOSTERING INSTRUCTIONAL IMPROVEMENT BY
GALVANIZING THE CHEMICAL COMMUNITY
PANEL MEMBERS:  Arthur Ellis (panel chair), Oren Anderson, Terry Collins, 
Edward Mellon, James Spencer, Zvi Szafran, Albert Thompson, Jr., Raymond 
Turner, Ann Walker Resolved: With concerted action, the chemical community can 
enhance the quality and impact of undergraduate instruction. Analysis:  The 
quality of science education in general and of introductory college chemistry 
courses in particular are matters of national concern. The chemistry community 
is committed to providing undergraduate chemistry courses that truly meet the 
needs of all undergraduate students. Our students need and are entitled to 
introductory chemistry courses that provide an appreciation for chemistry as a 
living scientific discipline and foster an understanding of the process of 
scientific inquiry. We are committed to establishing a dialogue with students 
that will identify their needs and will enable us to be more effective 
teachers. The chemistry community must educate all of our fellow citizens about 
the rational quality of the scientific method, about the excitement of 
chemistry and about its importance to our economy as well as to our advancement 
in technology and medicine and to our thinking about the environment.  We must 
develop effective ways to prepare adequately those students who will enter 
technical careers while ensuring that students who will not continue in the 
sciences develop an appreciation for the relevance of chemistry to their lives 
and for the nature of scientific inquiry. An infrastructure comparable to the 
one that enables our national research enterprise to bring forth innovation is 
needed to ensure a similar systematic development and dissemination of ideas 
for educational improvement in all segments of the higher education community. 
In addition, the culture of our community must change to value contributions to 
education in the same way it values research. These considerations lead us to 
the following recommendations:
To Chemistry Faculties:
We recommend that you establish a culture that
recognizes the critical importance of
providing a high-quality undergraduate education in
chemistry to all students by:
     o   working with each other to develop consensus for reform, including 
timetables for
          achieving curricular objectives.
     o    supporting individual faculty initiatives in
improving introductory chemistry courses
          including recognition of such contributions as part of tenure and 
          post-tenure evaluations.
     o    devising objective measures of progress in
achieving curricular goals.
     o    serving as positive role models for junior
faculty, teaching assistants, graduate and
          undergraduate students in demonstrating concern for the quality of 
          undergraduate
          education.
To Chemistry Department Chairs:
We recommend that you encourage innovation by
individual faculty members and aid in
the dissemination of successful curricular reform
experiments by:
     o    showing concern for the quality of courses for
both majors and non-majors and making
          sure that they engage the collective attention and talents of the 
          department.
     o    ensuring that resources and rewards are available
for faculty efforts in improving
          undergraduate courses, including recognition that such efforts take 
          time and that
          rewards may need to include support for a faculty member's research.
     o    mentoring junior faculty to be active participants
in processes of change.
     o    articulating to campus administrators the dynamic
nature of the discipline and the need
          for a strong, sustained institutional commitment to quality in the 
          undergraduate
          chemistry courses that are central to any liberal arts or technical 
          education.
     o    interacting with other departments on campus to
learn how chemistry courses fit the
          needs of their students.
     o    promoting interdisciplinary curricula that improve
an understanding of the nature of the
          scientific enterprise, especially in students who intend to become 
          elementary and
          secondary school teachers.
     o    recognizing those ideas that work and promoting
them nationally through regional
          meetings of chairs, the Council for Chemical Research, the American 
          Chemical Society
          and the Division of Chemical Education Task Force on General 
          Chemistry.
To Campus Administrators:
     We urge you to provide a campus environment supportive of faculty efforts 
to promote
     excellence in the teaching of undergraduate chemistry courses by:
     o    recognizing that the living nature of the
discipline demands continuous renewal and
          evaluation of course content and pedagogical methods.
     o    providing funding for the implementation,
evaluation, and dissemination of curricular
          innovations.
     o    giving tangible support to faculty efforts to
develop and evaluate new courses.
     o    ensuring that faculty efforts in undergraduate
education are recognized in tenure and
          post-tenure evaluations.
     o    increasing recognition of the teaching of
undergraduates by teaching awards and distinguished professorships.
To the American Chemical Society:
     We urge you to make the improvement of undergraduate chemistry courses an
     organizational priority by:
     o    using your resources to assist in the development,
evaluation, and dissemination of
          educational innovation.
     o    ensuring that the guidelines of the Committee on
Professional Training are flexible
          enough that successful curricular innovations can be readily adopted 
          by chemistry
          departments, and that the committee work closely with the National 
          Science
Foundation and the ACS Division of Chemical
Education Task Force on General
          Chemistry to make sure that its guidelines reflect the "state of the 
          art."
     o    seeking support for national awards for excellence
and innovation in undergraduate
teaching comparable to the awards that now
recognize excellence in research.
To the National Science Foundation:
     We recommend that you expand support for educational innovation by:
     o    increasing funding for programs such as
Instrumentation and Laboratory Improvement
and Undergraduate Course and Curriculum
Development, which support the
          infrastructure for curricular innovation; and Undergraduate Faculty 
          Enhancement,
          which brings chemical educators into contact with cutting edge 
          research to the benefit
          of their teaching.
     o    supporting with additional funding the
establishment of institutes for a few carefully selected areas where the 
expertise of an
interdisciplinary group could be useful in the
integration of new developments in research into
introductory courses in chemistry.
To Industry and Other Federal Agencies:
We urge that you acknowledge the importance of a
scientifically literate citizenry and a
well-trained technical labor force by investing in
chemical education by:
     o    encouraging employees to visit classrooms at all
levels to describe the objectives of
          their companies or agencies, the importance of the chemical industry 
          in meeting the
          needs of our citizens and in the overall economy of our country, and 
          the place of
          technical competence in national competitiveness and security.
     o    funding programs that will lead to a better
prepared and more diverse technical work
          force, in particular by supporting speakers who are role models 
          engaged in cutting-edge
          research and establishing scholarships that enable needy students to 
          concentrate on their
studies leading to careers in research and
teaching.
PANEL B
BRINGING RESEARCH CLOSER TO THE CLASSROOM
PANEL MEMBERS:  Paul Gassman (panel chair), Leland Allen, John Burmeister, 
Patricia Cunniff, Marcia Lester, Patrick McDougal, Stanley Pine, Karen 
Singmaster, Robert Wingfield Resolved:  New mechanisms can bring research to 
the classroom; to make this happen we must define faculty scholarship more 
broadly. Analysis:  Chemistry is an experimental science.  Concepts taught at 
the undergraduate level are based on what, at one time, was cutting edge 
research. Without research and discovery, there would be nothing to teach.  
Without teaching, there would be no one new to carry out scientific discovery.  
Teaching and research are co-dependent and unavoidably entwined. We conclude 
that we now need a better balance of old cutting edge research (much of which 
is still needed as a scientific base) and today's cutting edge research (to 
illustrate how little we know and that there is exciting research still to be 
done) built into course work.  This is a necessity not only for courses 
designed for chemistry and other science majors, but for the vast number of 
students for whom a broad chemistry course is their last formal exposure to the 
discipline.  Both groups need an appreciation of how scientific knowledge comes 
into existence, how the problems that have been created by technological 
development can only be solved by further research that results in real 
products, and the time required for this transformation.  The connection 
between research knowledge, economics, and national policy should be presented 
at every level of our curriculum in order that both our future scientists and 
our future voters will have an understanding of their roles in the development 
of our nation. The incorporation of this understanding of the nature of 
research and its importance needs to be carried out at community colleges and 
liberal arts colleges as well as in research universities. In order to achieve 
these goals we need new mechanisms and greater enthusiasm for bringing research 
closer to the classroom, and we need encouragement and recognition that rewards 
those who are innovative in making this happen.  We recommend a multi-pronged 
attack on the status quo as outlined below.
To Chemistry Faculties:
     We urge that you bring research into your classrooms by:
     o    using your lectures to illustrate with specific
examples and selected demonstrations how
          all knowledge is based on research, and how scientific 
          experimentation and discovery
          are necessary for the development of concepts.
     o    going beyond texts to include current research in
the curriculum to illustrate the living,
          ongoing nature of the discipline.
     o    inviting industrial speakers, government
researchers, and research-active faculty from
          other institutions to talk about their research and its ethical and 
          practical dimensions.
     o    bringing faculty research expertise into the
design of laboratory courses.
     o    illustrating the role of experimentation,
observation, and scientific deductions in the
          laboratory while avoiding whenever possible the classical "repeat the 
          instructions"
          experiments.
     o    enabling students to experience themselves as
professionals by designing laboratory
          courses to parallel research, including the use of modern 
          instrumentation to generate
data in the solution of real problems, and
emphasis on both individual and team
          research.
     o    allowing time in the design of the laboratory for
students to fail, to learn from their
mistakes and to repeat experiments until
meaningful results are obtained.
     o    recognizing the synergism of research and teaching
and the need for a balance between
          the two, including peer respect both for the outstanding teacher who 
          brings research
to the classroom and for the outstanding
researcher who takes pride in teaching and
does innovative curricular development.
     o    recognizing that nontraditional research, such as
is needed to develop new courses or
          new approaches to the laboratory, is extremely important to 
          education, and, therefore,
broadening the definition of scholarship to
include peer-reviewed publications that
          describe educational research and innovation.
     o    encouraging undergraduates to be involved in
research to the extent possible, starting
          as early as the first or second year of college, including research 
          related to curricular
          development.
     o    setting high standards for undergraduate research
and encouraging undergraduates to
          make presentations of their work in writing or orally at 
          institutional undergraduate
          research symposia, at American Chemical Society Student Affiliate 
          Poster Symposia,
or at the annual National Conference on
Undergraduate Research.
     o    writing articles based on your own research at a
level suitable for use by beginning
          undergraduates in community colleges as well as in four-year 
          institutions.
To Chemistry Department Chairs:
     We urge that you create an environment that supports the synergism of 
research and
     teaching by:
     o    ensuring that faculty who bring research into the
curriculum, whether by revising
          lecture courses, creating new laboratory experiments, mentoring 
          undergraduates in their
laboratories, or by writing for undergraduate
audiences, get recognition for such
          efforts.
     o    providing resources such as space and research
support for undergraduate research.
     o    establishing awards for excellence in
undergraduate research.
To Campus Administrators:
At Community Colleges, we urge that you support
faculty in professional development by:
     o    encouraging them to spend summers and sabbaticals
in a research environment.
     o    by inviting research active scientists from
industry, academia and government to visit
          and to present lectures that will aid the faculty
in the incorporation of research into
          their classrooms.
     At Liberal Arts Colleges, we recommend that you encourage the 
incorporation of research
     into undergraduate education by:
     o    recognizing faculty and student research as part
of the faculty member's teaching
          duties.
     o    defining clearly the blend of research and
teaching that is expected when faculty are
          being hired and the role that research plays as part of the liberal 
          arts curriculum.
     o    encouraging research to the extent possible by
providing release time and set-up funds
          for new faculty as well as space and financial support for 
          undergraduate research.
     o    recognizing and rewarding achievements in both
traditional and nontraditional research.
At Research Universities, we recommend that quality
teaching at both the undergraduate
and graduate levels play a greater role in the
activities of a faculty member and that this
     be encouraged by:
     o    increasing the valuation of teaching in hiring,
tenure and promotion decisions.
     o    recognizing and rewarding in promotion and salary
decisions, as well as with research
          support, research active faculty who participate in curricular 
          innovation.
     o    encouraging faculty to participate in outreach to
four-year colleges, community colleges
          and high schools through short courses, workshops, and summer 
          research
          opportunities, so that the excitement associated with experimentation 
          and discovery can be transmitted down the educational chain.
To Funding Agencies:
     We recommend that you modify your funding policies to implement the 
recommendations
     outlined above by:
     o    recognizing that the goal of research funding is
to be supportive of faculty members
          in the totality of their careers, research and teaching, and not to 
          remove faculty from
          the classroom.
     o    initiating professional development programs for
faculty at community and liberal arts
          colleges to spend summers and sabbaticals in research environments, 
          including funding
          for follow-up research activities at the faculty's home institution.
     o    supporting interaction between faculty at major
research institutions and at liberal arts
          colleges along the models already established in the consortia funded 
          by the Pew Charitable Trust and the Dana Foundation.
     o    supporting undergraduate researchers with funds
specifically designated as academic
          year salaries for them to allow them to devote their time to research 
          instead of to the
jobs many must now take to finance their
education.
     o    recognizing that faculty scholarship should be
defined broadly enough to include
          innovative contributions to teaching and that special awards should 
          go to young faculty
          who excel in both teaching and research as was recommended in the 
          recent NSF report
          on America's Academic Future (A Report of the Presidential Young 
          Investigator
          Colloquium on U.S. Engineering, Mathematics, and Science Education 
          for the Year 2010 and Beyond, NSF, January, 1992).
     o    recognizing that research active faculty who
participate in curricular innovation need
          additional support if their research is not to suffer, and therefore, 
          providing
          mechanisms for shared support between the research and educational 
          divisions.
     o    encouraging your grantees to make their research
results easily accessible to the larger
          educational community by writing articles about their research 
          suitable for use by
faculty and students at the beginning
undergraduate level.
To the American Chemical Society:
We recommend that you give excellence in chemical
education at the undergraduate level
     high visibility by:
     o    continuing and expanding programs on college
chemistry within the Education Division
          of the American Chemical Society.
     o    establishing very visible national awards for
innovation in the teaching of chemistry that
parallel the awards given for excellence in
research.
PANEL C
ASSESSING INSTRUCTIONAL INNOVATION;
IMPROVING THE PREPARATION OF CHEMISTRY TEACHERS;
ASSESSING STUDENT LEARNING
PANEL MEMBERS:  George Bodner (panel chair), Susan Arena, Clarita Bhat, 
Adrienne Kozlowski, Robert Kozma, J. J. Lagowski, Lucy Pryde, Brock Spencer, 
Theodore Williams,
Steven Zumdahl
Resolved:  Improved assessment of instructional innovation
will drive curricular change;
innovative methods demand better assessment of student learning to facilitate 
better preparation of chemistry teachers. Analysis:  Innovation differs from 
change in instruction. Innovation results from the effort to solve a local 
problem.   Instructional innovation therefore satisfies the microscopic 
definition of curriculum development: the process of designing a course that 
meets specific student needs. Change occurs on a macroscopic scale when many 
institutions incorporate an instructional innovation into similar courses.  
Sarason (Sarason, S.B. The Predictable Failure of Educational Reform: Can We 
Change Course Before It's Too Late?  San Francisco: JosseyBass, 1990.) captured 
the difference between innovation and change in instruction, "A good idea whose 
time has come is no guarantee of success."  For innovation to lead to lasting 
changes in chemical instruction, we must redefine the needs of our students and 
the goals of our instruction to include more than just student mastery of a 
certain content.  Once we do this, we need new means of assessing student 
learning defined broadly, which will then give us a basis for evaluating 
instructional innovation and for better preparing chemistry teachers. At 
present, assessment of student learning is based on techniques that are 
designed primarily to be relatively inexpensive and to require a minimum of 
faculty and student time.  Most commonly we use multiple-choice examinations.  
We assess on a semester-by-semester basis, with no attempt to measure either 
long-term retention of, or the ability to apply knowledge.  Our examinations 
focus on the kinds of questions for which there is a single "correct" answer, 
rather than those for which the correct answer is unknown, or which have more 
than one correct answer.  As a result, we construct an arbitrary boundary 
between what we do as scientists and what we ask our students to do in science 
courses. Our tests are not the only problem in our assessment. We grade classes 
on a curve and essentially eliminate the lower half. Many of our 
underrepresented minority students disappear in this process. In this what we 
want? We think not? Lovitts and Champagne (Lovitts, B.E. and Champagne, A.B. 
In: Assessment in the Service of Instruction.  Edited by A.B. Champagne, B.E. 
Lovitts and B.J. Calinger, Washington, D.C.: American Association for the 
Advancement of Science, 1990) have described a common source of confusion about 
assessing student learning.  "The term 'assessment' conjures up images of its 
most common use�assigning grades to students�or its most common format�the 
multiple choice  examination."  In practice, as Lovitts and Champagne2 note, 
assessment is used also to formulate educational policy, to improve classroom 
instruction, to convey to students and their parents our expectations of 
student performance, to monitor the state of science education, and to 
determine
whether resources have been used
effectively.  All too often the effect of assessment is so powerful that it 
drives instruction, trapping us in a particular curriculum because we know how 
to assess that mode of student learning and no other.  We must examine the 
methods that we use for assessing student learning. We must also assess our 
lectures, our laboratories, our methods, and our tools.  In this overall 
assessment, independent evaluation by cognitive scientists holds the best 
promise for success. Any evaluation of instructional innovation has to broaden 
the criteria by which innovation is judged from: "Do students learn the course 
content better in the experimental setting?" to "What do students really learn? 
 To what extent do the thought processes of the students resemble those of 
practicing chemists?"  Other questions that could form a basis for evaluation 
include:  "What effect does the program have on the retention of students? Does 
the innovation motivate students to learn?  Does the innovation enhance student 
access to careers in science and engineering? Does it affect the time that 
students must spend on the course?  Does it improve the efficiency with which 
students use their time?  Does it serve the needs of non-science majors as well 
as majors?  How does the innovation affect the course instructor?  What is the 
effect on the department within which the innovation occurs?  What does the 
implementation cost in time, effort, and money?  Are the instructional goals 
welldefined?  Have they changed?  Does the
instruction meet the goals?"
Such assessment of instructional innovation is necessary to develop the 
knowledge that can lead to broad dissemination of innovative changes among 
chemistry departments.  For this to happen, innovators must produce a public 
artifact that other members of the community can consult in order to implement 
the innovation.  Innovators must ensure that their program can serve other 
institutions and must develop materials that facilitate use by other 
instructors. It will be possible to develop criteria for the better preparation 
of chemistry teachers if the goals of student learning and instructional 
innovation are defined to include more than mastery of course content.   
Preparing chemistry teachers often focuses only on pre-service and in-service 
teacher training programs.  This is a mistake; preparing teachers goes beyond 
the limits of the K-12 classroom to the college and university level. Community 
colleges have made some progress, and a few four-year colleges include 
discussion of chemistry teaching in professional development.  Research and 
comprehensive universities have made little progress.  In these institutions, 
promotion and tenure rest squarely on research success. Having a Ph.D. degree 
in chemistry does not make one an effective teacher.  Shulman, L.S.  In the 
Handbook of Research on Teaching, 3rd Edition, Edited by M.C. Wittrock, New 
York: Macmillan Publishing Co., 1986) has argued that content knowledge is 
necessary but not sufficient.  Teachers at all levels need general pedagogical 
knowledge about how students learn and content-specific pedagogical knowledge 
about how to teach within a particular field. Additional research on how 
college and university students learn chemistry is desperately needed. To 
encourage the chemical community to move toward the achievement of these goals, 
we have
the following recommendations:
To Chemistry Faculties:
     We recommend that you broaden your assessment of student learning and  
instructional
innovation and contribute to the improvement of
chemistry teaching by:
     o    critically examining your goals in instructing
students.
     o    thinking about whether the methods you use in
testing student knowledge further the
          goals that you have identified.
     o    engaging in professional development as an
educator by participating in discussions
          with faculty colleagues within the department and from other 
          disciplines, especially
          those with expertise in pedagogical methodology, about educational 
          goals and methods
of assessing whether such goals have been
achieved.
     o    inviting faculty from four-year colleges to serve
as mentors in teaching for faculty in
          research institutions.
     o    being supportive of colleagues who are attempting
innovation both in course content
          and in methods of assessment.
     o    collaborating with Schools of Education in
programs for the training of pre-service
          chemistry teachers by designing courses that introduce them to the 
          content of chemistry
          in a context that builds their understanding of experimental sciences 
          and empowers
          them to take experiments into elementary and secondary classrooms.
     o    participating in workshops for in-service
teachers, again with the specific goal of giving
          them practical advice on how to engage their students in the 
          processes of scientific
          discovery.
To Departmental and Campus Administrators:
     We urge that you foster faculty development, and with it fresh thinking 
about instructional
     goals, how to achieve them, and how to assess whether
attempts to do so have been
     successful by:
     o    creating an environment in which the status quo is
questioned.
     o    recognizing faculty motivation and attitudes as
the most important factors in processes
          of change.
     o    being supportive of motivated faculty during the
time that it takes to design, implement,
and assess instructional innovation.
     o    encouraging interdisciplinary projects that bring
the knowledge of experts in pedagogy
to bear on questions of student learning,
innovation, and assessment of outcomes.
To the National Science Foundation:
We recommend that you support thinking about
instructional innovation and methods of
     assessing such innovation by:
     o    creating a mechanism to fund projects to develop
new approaches to assessing student
          learning in chemistry, either through the Division of Research, 
          Evaluation and
          Dissemination, or for larger impact, as a component of the Division 
          of Undergraduate
          Education.
     o    expanding the Undergraduate Faculty Enhancement
program to fund pedagogical
          workshops to help college and university faculty understand the need 
          for and how to
          implement new modes of student assessment as they are developed.
     o    requiring that evaluation of instructional
evaluation go beyond measurements of how
          well students learn in order to provide the information necessary to 
          facilitate the
          process by which innovation becomes change.
To Professional Societies:
We recommend that you recognize the power of assessment tools developed at the 
State and National levels to shape instruction, and resist modes of assessment 
of student learning that determine what is taught and how it is taught.
PANEL D
STIMULATING INSTRUCTIONAL INNOVATIONS AND
IMPROVING THE SPEED, QUALITY, CONVENIENCE, AND
RELIABILITY OF DISSEMINATION
PANEL MEMBERS:  Glenn Crosby (panel chair), Robert Boeckman, Rodney Boyer, 
Raymond Chang, Xavier Creary, Edwin Heath, Robert Lynch, James Swartz, and Gary 
Wnek Resolved: We need new approaches to journals, series, textbooks, and other 
forms of publication, in order to achieve widespread instructional improvement. 
Analysis:  Rapid development in science and technology and the new world 
economy are straining the nation's educational enterprise.  Educational 
innovation has not kept pace with the need for improvement.  Moreover, not only 
has instructional innovation lagged, but also what is taught and how it is 
taught is not effectively informed by recent pedagogical research. Chemical 
educators agree that we must implement classroom innovations, create new 
laboratories based on discovery, teach new research results, and infuse modern 
chemical instrumental techniques into the curriculum.  In addition, a consensus 
is emerging that the chemical curriculum must reflect the impact of chemistry 
on our culture and the relevance of chemistry to the life of the citizen.  We 
can no longer ignore people, economics, and policy in our chemistry courses. In 
chemistry, the current methods of dissemination of instructional improvements 
and innovations are slow, inefficient and inadequate.  Whereas chemical 
research has developed many media that disseminate new results and ideas, 
chemical education has not.  Chemical research uses a large variety of 
discipline-specific journals, reviews, abstract journals, notes, and brief 
communications, but chemical education has only the Journal of Chemical 
Education. Many innovations and improvements that chemical educators report at 
meetings, conferences, workshops, and symposia are not widely reported and thus 
are lost.  Industry, the research and development community, and government 
seem unaware of the serious problem that exists in disseminating chemical 
education innovations and improvements, but all have a major stake in 
maintaining excellence in chemical education.  Chemical education needs both 
new journals and electronic dissemination. Chemical education is not using new 
technology effectively. Colleges and universities are not yet  completely 
networked, thus frustrating effective, efficient electronic dissemination.  New 
technology opens access to vast data bases and information systems at 
relatively low cost, but computational power has not impacted, by and large, 
the way we teach and the way we communicate with each other. For technology to 
find its true place in chemical education, we recommend the following: To the 
American Chemical Society and the Division of Chemical Education of the ACS:
We recommend that you foster the dissemination of
innovative ideas presented at meetings
     by:
     o    requiring the submission of preprints in electronic
format of all papers, symposia,
          addresses and posters presented at national meetings and biennial 
          conferences, and
          instituting mechanisms by which they can be widely disseminated 
          either in print or by
          electronic means.
     o    maintaining a repository of new educational
software.
To the Publishing Industry working with the American Chemical Society, the 
National Science Foundation, the National Science Teachers Association, the 
American Association for the Advancement of Science, and the Department of 
Education:
     We recommend that you foster change by:
     o    instituting programs that will stimulate
collaboration between the education and
          publication communities on experimental projects that will test 
          innovative mechanisms
          for providing "source books" for educators.  These publications 
          should be compilations
          of current information in a flexible format that will allow 
          selection, reorganization,
          modification, and manipulation by the user.  A concrete example is a 
          10,000 page
          electronic textbook from which an individualized course of study can 
          be assembled by
          an instructor and reproduced by the publisher for student purchase.
     o    creating a new publication, Chemical Education
Letters, that would provide rapid and
          convenient dissemination of innovative laboratory developments, 
          pedagogical suggestions,
          methods, ideas for alternative learning environments, and educational 
          technology. Such
          a publication should be available in both electronic and print 
          formats and possess the
          following features:
          (a)  A refreeing mechanism controlled by a Board of Editors.
(b)  A policy that maintains a short, informal
method of communication.
          (c)  A formal policy for facilitating exchange of information between 
          reader and author,
               with the Board of Editors playing a prominent role in 
               stimulating submissions and promoting the exchange of ideas.
          o    creating one or more series
publications,Verified Laboratory Experiments, that
               would parallel successful series such as Organic Syntheses  and 
               Inorganic
               Syntheses.  In particular these publication series should have 
               the following features:
          (a)  Editorial Boards that would identify potential
contributors, stimulate submissions,
          and provide means for checking suggested laboratory innovations in 
          actual
          classroom settings and ascertaining their quality and effectiveness.
     (b)  Emphasis on imparting ideas, procedures, and phenomena from the 
cutting edge of
          research into the undergraduate laboratory, highlighting processes of 
          investigation
          that can be adapted to many different experiments, rather than 
          necessarily
     completely worked out laboratory exercises. (c)  Machine-searchable 
databases and reliable
indexes that could be readily accessed
by both students and professionals.
     o    having the Chemical Abstracts Service provide
the chemistry community with a
          "Chemical Abstracts Select" on innovation and new technology in 
          chemical
          education.
     o    creating a journal outside the Division of
Chemical Education devoted to issues
          pertinent to chemical education at the college and university level.
     o    creating two kinds of review journals.  One
would review pedagogical information
          from cognitive science that is relevant to chemical education.  The 
          other would
          summarize and compare different approaches in the teaching of a 
          lecture topic, or
          a laboratory for example.
     o    establishing National Resource Centers in the
central areas of the chemical sciences.
          These centers could be modeled after the National Science  Resources 
          Center
          jointly established by the National Academy of Science and the 
          Smithsonian
          Institution or the Polymer Education Center at the University of 
          Wisconsin/Steven's
          Point that is affiliated with the American Chemical Society.  
          Packages containing
          pedagogical ideas and materials generated under the National Science 
          Foundation's
          Undergraduate Curriculum and Course Development Program and 
          laboratory
          experiments developed through its Instrumentation and Laboratory 
          Improvement
          program could be made conveniently available for widespread 
          dissemination through these centers.
     o    providing support for the development of
appropriate materials such as source
          books for educators.
     o    providing funding for workshops to guide
faculty in their efforts to change
          instructional paradigms.
     o    providing assistance for the rapid initiation
of means of disseminating educational
          innovations such as the series on new methods
in laboratory instruction.
          o    working with other agencies, such as the
Department of Education, to fund an
               electronic network that ties chemistry faculty together.
          o    establishing and maintaining a bulletin board
that would allow faculty to pose any
               questions they wanted to, and enable anybody else on the network 
               to respond. To Chemistry Faculty and Departmental and 
               Institutional Administrators: We recommend that you become 
               actively involved in the
processes of the dissemination of
     educational innovation by:
          o         making it possible for every chemistry
instructor at every level of higher
                    education to be on an electronic network with an output 
                    computer. To the Office of Science and Technology Policy, 
                    the members of the Federal Coordinating Council for 
                    Science, Engineering, and Technology, the National Academy 
                    of Science, the National Academy of Engineering, the 
                    Institute of Medicine, the National Science Foundation, the 
                    American Association for the Advancement of Science, the 
                    National Science Teachers Association, and all science and 
                    engineering societies that publish official news and 
                    information
organs:
We recommend that you initiate or expand awareness
campaigns to raise the consciousness
of the academic, governmental and industrial research
communities concerning the
     seriousness of the science education and literacy problems besetting the 
nation.  A particular
problem is the lack of transfer of technology and
information from the nation's research and
     development activities to its educational programs.  We urge you to 
address this by:
          o         stimulating academic and non-academic
scientists and technologists to think of the
                    transfer of technology and information in broader terms 
                    than currently conceived,
                    including the possible incorporation of modern developments 
                    into school and
                    university curricula in order to close the gap between the 
                    frontiers of knowledge
                    and science as it is perceived and taught at all 
                    educational levels.
PANEL E
BRINGING CUTTING-EDGE TECHNOLOGY IN
COMPUTERS AND INSTRUMENTS INTO THE CLASSROOM
PANEL MEMBERS:  Arlene Russell (panel chair), John Amend, Lawrence Bottomley, 
Grace Chiu, Thomas Greenbowe, Harry Hajian, Peter Lykos, John
Moore, Gilbert Pacey, and Patricia
Reggio
Resolved:  Initiating and spreading the use of new technology in chemical 
education demands proper infrastructure. Analysis:   New technology is driving 
a paradigm shift in chemical education. Powerful work station computers 
equipped with high-end-graphics monitors and user-friendly operating systems 
facilitate visualization and bring molecular modeling and computational 
chemistry to undergraduate courses and laboratories, enabling student 
exploration and discovery. Visualization of structures, nucleic acid-small 
molecule interactions, enzyme-substrate interactions, and data could enhance 
student interest and appreciation. Animation of reactions could enhance 
learning. Computers remove the drudgery from data acquisition and plotting, and 
laboratory courses can now cover new material. Computers bring data from 
state-of-the-art instruments to undergraduates and simulate instrument 
operation. Multimedia programs offer many opportunities for presenting 
situations that require professional judgment and decisions. New educational 
technology makes possible problem-based courses and labs. We can present 
motion, still frames, sound, and animation in an environment that enables 
high-level computation, modeling, and visualization. Using the tactile glove 
and scanning tunneling microscopy imaging in virtual reality one can now see 
and move a single atom on a surface. Imagine a blind student learning chemical 
structure by tactile input from virtual models or students handling dangerous 
chemical or radioactive waste in a virtual model. Opportunities abound, but we 
have problems.  The new educational technology is expensive, and it requires 
costly infrastructure. In return, new technology offers gains in educational 
efficiency and productivity. Broad-band optical-fiber networks such as that 
proposed by President Clinton enable rapid, reliable interactive information 
transfer beyond the class room to individuals, schools, and industry. We need 
similar networks on campus. As of March 1992, while 100% of 104 research 
universities were on NSF-NET, only 80% of the  109 doctoral universities, fewer 
than 50% of 595 comprehensive universities, 33% of 572 liberal arts colleges, 
and 5% of 1367 two-year colleges were on the network. Furthermore, we face a 
massive educational task in bringing our existing faculty up to speed in using 
and teaching the new technology. Research instrumentation is developing at a 
frenetic pace, but educational instrumentation lags far behind. Colleges and 
universities that cannot afford research-level instruments could use instrument 
simulators�if such simulators were available. But we have not put forth the 
effort to produce instrument simulators. Why are we satisfied with
instruction with out-moded
instruments?  Chemical education needs the design of new instruments.
Five broad areas impinge on the introduction and dissemination of new 
technology into lower-division chemistry courses:  (1) the rewards and 
recognition that faculty receive for educational innovation, (2) the 
availability of funds to implement innovation and the attendant infrastructure, 
(3) the lack of knowledge and information that faculty have regarding 
educational technology and innovation, (4) the introduction of cutting-edge 
technology, instrumentation, and research into the lower-division curriculum, 
(5) the development of problem-based, relevant laboratory courses for majors 
and for non-science majors.
Recommendations
(1)  Rewards and Recognition
Faculty work in producing non-print innovative
materials frequently receives little
     attention. (DeLoughry, T.J. The Chronicle of Higher Education, March 3, 
1993). Efforts by faculty in
producing computer or multimedia instructional
programs are further thwarted by
     educational bureaucracies that claim ownership and copyrights.  To foster 
educational
     innovation, we must recognize and value instructional computer and 
multimedia programs,
and we must offer the creators the same rights of
ownership that textbook authors enjoy.
     We must broaden our concept of scholarship to include peer-reviewed 
publications that
     describe educational research and innovation in this area as in others.
To Campus Administrators:
     We recommend that you facilitate the development of innovative computer 
and multimedia
     programs by:
     o         recognizing creativity in these areas in
tenure and promotion decisions.
     o         removing institutional barriers to the
ownership of intellectual property rights
               for the creators of such programs.
To the National Science Foundation:
We recommend that you support creativity in the
development of educational software by:
          o    setting a goal of having all chemistry
faculty on an electronic network by 2000
               and seeking funds from the Congress to achieve this goal.
          o    funding, with the Department of Education, a
network for the dissemination of
               educational software.
          o    maintaining with the American Chemical
Society an electronic bulletin board for
               abstracts of educational innovations.
(2)  Funding Implementation
     New technology enables new instruction.  Computer and multimedia 
technology beg for
     a new curriculum.  Molecular modeling, computational chemistry, 
simulation, animation,
     and real-time experiments cry out for a place in the curriculum.  Rapid 
access to remote
     data bases and interactive student dialog on networks offer new 
educational opportunities that we must not ignore. Faculty-driven innovation 
will, however, not suffice.
Implementation of technological innovation in the
curriculum and the necessary
     infrastructure to support implementation require major funding.
To the Congress, the State Legislatures, and Private Foundations:
     We recommend emphatically that the new technological infrastructure 
necessary for educational
     innovation be supported by:
          o    implementing the President�s initiative for a
national broad-band fiber-optic
information network.
          o    extending such a network to campuses.
          o    purchasing the new educational equipment
required by the paradigm shift that is
               occurring in chemical education.
          o    providing the facilities, classrooms, and
laboratories that the new educational
               technology demands.
To Funding Agencies:
We recommend that you further the shift to modern
chemical education by:
          o    supporting and encouraging new modes of
instruction that use on-line computer
               materials, non-traditional classrooms, and learning at a 
               distance.
(3)  Faculty Enhancement
     Widespread adoption of new technology will not occur without substantial 
investment in
     faculty enhancement.  Both faculty and administrators must learn to value 
and understand
     new instruments and new technology.  We must develop effective, accessible 
mechanisms
     that inform faculty about innovations, the impact on learning of confirmed 
innovations, the
     technology, and the cost and implementation of such.
Faculty enhancement must include
     on-site and off-site programs. New topics in the lowerdivision curriculum 
such as molecular modeling and computational chemistry will
require re-education of many faculty
in the science as well as the technology. Faculty
enhancement programs can revitalize
     chemical education.
To Chairs of Chemistry Departments:
     We recommend that you actively encourage the renewal of the skills of your 
faculty by:
          o    including educational innovation and
educational technology in departmental
               seminar programs.
          o    encouraging and funding faculty attendance at
conferences, such as the Biennial
               Conference on Chemical Education and the Pittsburgh Conference, 
               where new
               instruments and new educational technologies are shown and 
               discussed.
          o    encouraging and funding faculty visits to
institutions that have implemented
               successful innovations and/or curricular reform.
To the American Chemical Society:
We recommend that you promote faculty renewal by:
     o         recommending through your Committee on
Professional Training and the
               Chemical Technician Certification Program that over a
               five-year period all faculty participate in faculty enhancement 
               workshops in chemical education technology.
     o         obtaining through your Division of Chemical
Education long term support for the
               lease or purchase of the equipment necessary to enable 
               demonstration of
               innovative instructional technology projects at regional and 
               national ACS
               meetings.
To the National Science Foundation:
We recommend that you catalyze the spread of new
technology by:
     o         urging college and university administrators
to participate in faculty enhancement
               programs dealing with innovation that is based on new 
               educational technology.
     o         creating a program to fund "technology on
wheels" projects, managed by ACS,
               that can be set up in a department for an extended period to 
               allow hands-on use
               and training for a significant portion of the faculty.

          o    providing travel subsidies for faculty,
particularly those in two-year colleges, to
               acquire training in educational technology.
To the Department of Education:
     We recommend that, through local school districts, you contribute to 
faculty enhancement
     by:
     o    sponsoring summer institutes for two-year-
college faculty to improve their
               knowledge of educational technology and modern instrumentation.
(4)       Cutting-edge Technology, Instrumentation, and Research
          Cutting-edge technology, instrumentation, and research must occupy a 
          prominent place in the new curriculum; much of our Victorian 
          heritage
must retire.  Our laboratory courses
must assume their proper place in the curriculum as
independent courses with their own
educational agenda and instructional goals that
feature exploration and discovery. Modern
          instrumentation, molecular modeling, and computational chemistry 
          comprise central
features in the emerging curriculum. Instrumental
instruction occupies too small a place
          in the current curriculum. Simulation can help, and we should create 
          low-cost instrument
          simulators. High-quality chemical education, however, requires 
          student access to instruments that produce research-quality data.
Chemical education needs new instrument
          designs that offer lower-cost modular instruments that use a common 
          computer for data
acquisition and processing. The recommendation of
Panel B that more forefront chemical
research be brought into the curriculum cannot be
implemented without major expenditures
for new instrumentation and technology for the
undergraduate. Financial problems abound.
          But the chemistry of the dawning century requires more than test 
          tubes and beakers.
To the National Science Foundation:
We recommend that you spur the development of new
instrumentation by:
          o    soliciting proposals through the Small
Business Innovation Research Program
               and the Division of Undergraduate Education for the design of 
               modular
               instruments built around a single dataacquisition computer.
To the American Chemical Society:
          We recommend that you encourage the incorporation of modern 
          technology into the
     curriculum by:
     o    requiring through the Committee on
Professional Training and the Chemical
          Technician Certification Program hands-on experience with modern 
          analytical
          instrumentation, computer-controlled data acquisition, data 
          processing,
          computational chemistry, and molecular modeling in undergraduate 
          degree
          programs.
(5)  Problem-based Courses for Non-Science Majors
The consequences of our failure to educate all
students about chemistry, economics, and
     policy afflict us every day:  Chemicals cause cancer. Chemicals pollute.  
We suffer from
bad legislation:  the Delaney Amendment, the 1990
Clean Air Act, the New Jersey EPA
     Initiative.  We must educate non-science majors.  We give too little 
attention to our general
     education courses, many of which are so  watered down and irrelevant that 
students shun
them. History of science and science-technology-
society courses offer a better, more
     palatable approach, but these courses still keep the non-major student far 
from our active enterprise�discovery. We need new laboratory-based
courses that engage students in
exploration and discovery, courses that focus on
societal problems and place the students
     in the role of decision makers and problem solvers, using multimedia 
technology.
     Medicine has exploited this strategy brilliantly in training medical 
students. New
     visualization technology can bring chemistry to life for non-majors.
To the National Science Foundation:
     We recommend that you support curricular reform that engages all our 
students actively
     in the process of discovery by:
     o    encouraging curriculum reform projects that
emphasize visualization of data,
          orbitals, molecules, molecular interactions, and energy surfaces.
     o    supporting the development of hypermedia for
the enhancement of interactive
          educational opportunities for all students.
                         PRESENTATIONS OF THE COCHAIRS
                    Introductory Remarks for the NSF Workshop
               on Innovation and Change in Chemistry
Instruction

          Orville L. Chapman Department of Chemistry and
Biochemistry
               University of California Los Angeles
     As we consider innovation and change in chemistry instruction, let us 
imagine ourselves not as a group of chemical educators but as a group of 
investors.  We own a Victorian hotel built in the late nineteenth century; our 
hotel occupies a prime site in downtown San Francisco. We love this old hotel; 
we have spent our lives trying to make it pay.  In its heyday, our hotel did 
well but now the occupancy rate seldom exceeds 20%.  We are losing money -- and 
credibility -- no one stays here unless they are required to do so.  
Fundamental questions confront us.  Shall we remodel? Is the structure sound?  
Has the time come to plant charges,
demolish, and rebuild?
     Let us consider remodeling our enterprise -- we do some things very well, 
and we could focus the future on past successes.  We train excellent 
technicians.  This is an extremely important aspect of our enterprise.  Our 
students have given the United States a research base that the world admires 
and emulates.  Our students have created a productive industry that is central 
to the U.S. economy.  The chemical industry is our only non-subsidized industry 
that has a positive balance of payments.  This balance of payments amounted to 
15.9 billion dollars in 1989 and 15.8 billion dollars in 1990.  The chemical 
industry is twice as important to the U.S. economy as is the automobile 
industry.  The United States cannot afford to lose our chemical industry.  Our 
economy stands poised on the brink of disaster.  What happened in the U.S.S.R. 
can happen in the United States.  In "The Rise and Fall of the Great Powers," 
Paul Kennedy, a Yale economist, predicted the demise of the U.S.S.R. on 
economic grounds four years before it happened.  He also predicted that the 
United States will follow the U.S.S.R. into economic chaos.  You say, "It can't 
happen here".  But it can happen here; it is.  The United States government 
borrows one billion dollars each day, and the percentage of our budget required 
to serve this debt grows each year.  We can see the end clearly.  We must 
articulate the importance of chemical industry.  I am frightened that so few 
chemists know how much our economy depends on chemical industry.  The U.S. 
chemical industry is certainly the proudest accomplishment of our enterprise.
     We must never belittle our accomplishments, but all is not sweetness and 
light even with our present small clientele.  We no longer attract the best 
talent in our nation, and our product is, on average, not as good as it was 
twenty years age. Japanese and European chemists now receive better training in 
chemistry and have a broader, deeper education than the chemists we produce.  
These statements hold whether one compares B.S.degree recipients or 
Ph.D.-degree recipients.  Inadequate K-12 education causes some of our 
problems, but we have lowered our own standards -- grade inflation in chemistry 
exists across our nation.  We have eliminated foreign language requirements and 
reduced humanities requirements.  We have greatly reduced the credit hours that 
we require for a degree.  We must better educate our current clientele, and we 
must demand that our students meet higher standards.  Our courses focus on 
facts, memory, and exercises, but science without exploration and discovery is 
history.  We teach history.  We must emphasize process rather than fact and 
memory.  We must discuss ideas that challenge both us and our students.  We 
must confront our students with real problems, problems that matter. Remodeling 
our hotel will help us serve our current clients better, but far more serious 
problems demand our attention.
     Is our structure sound?  If it is, why can we not expand our clientele? We 
ignore the education of all of our students but especially those who choose not 
to take a chemistry course. Our current students leave our courses as 
scientifically illiterate as when they entered.  I estimate that 80% of U.S. 
students never take a chemistry course in college; these students ignore us. 
Our failure to educate all students has created frightening liabilities.  We 
have a nation-wide anti-chemistry bias.  We consider chemistry to be the 
central science.   In this regard, we think like the Easter Island natives, who 
call their small island Rapa Nui -- the navel of the universe. We seem unable 
to realize or accept that society considers chemistry, not a central science, 
but a festering sore that may be malignant.  To our society, we are a source of 
problems not solutions.  We endure a scientific illiteracy in our society that 
beggars description.  A bill board in Los Angeles shows a young woman in a 
leotard with the caption, "Chemicals belong in the test tubes, not in bodies."  
Only in a society of science illiterates can such idiocy appear in public.  But 
worse liabilities loom.  We suffer seriously flawed legislation such as the 
1990 Clean Air Act.  We face the destruction of a major portion of our chemical 
industry through the emotional New Jersey EPA initiative, which Governor Florio 
says is intended to eliminate chemical industry from New Jersey.  Governor 
Florio's words protend disaster.
     Our liabilities exist because we fail to educate all students so that they 
have a context for chemistry.  Our quaint Victorian hotel does not meet current 
standards.  It will withstand neither the earthquake of global change nor the 
fire of economic competition.  The world has changed since the late nineteenth 
century when our hotel was built. U.S. society has changed rapidly since 1970; 
the decline in the fortunes of our hotel date from that time.  We have a 
curiously Victorian enterprise amid sleek modern structures that meet current 
standards and look eagerly to the next century.  In an age of space 
exploration, organ
transplants, and genetic engineering,
nineteenth-century chemistry cannot compete.  We have failed to bring modern 
chemistry to our present clientele.  We have given our students no context for 
chemistry.  We have no hope of expanding our clientele with our present 
structure.  The structure is not sound.  The message from 80% of college 
students comes in loud and clear. Chemistry without people, economics, and 
policy is irrelevant.  We choose to be irrelevant; they ignore us.  What shall 
we do?
     Dark, empty rooms in our hotel stare at us through blind eyes revealing 
just how irrelevant we are.  Refurbishing our enterprise will make it more 
attractive to our existing clientele, who are required to use it.  Raising 
standards and broadening our program will improve our enterprise.  But new 
paint and new curtains will not bring in new customers. Cosmetic change will 
deceive only us..  The structure is unsound; our hotel has stress fractures all 
over it.  The strategic site that we occupy has greater value than our 
Victorian hotel.  We must clear space for a twenty-first century structure.
     How can we do it?  Our new enterprise must interface chemistry, people, 
economics and policy: we must reach every college and university student in the 
United States.  Every student must understand that he or she is a complex 
chemical plant producing and using thousands of chemicals and that everything 
that you can touch in this universe is chemical.  We must present chemistry in 
its social context.  In doing so, we take the first step toward science 
literacy, for ourselves as well as for our students.  We must establish reason 
as the basis for policy decisions. Kingman Brewster's famous question, "If not 
reason, what?", hangs over our society as a dark pall.  Rampant ideology 
controls much of our national policy, but science has a better answer. We must 
focus on process, the process of exploration and discovery, and we must 
eliminate much of the memory work that dominates our current courses. We can no 
longer turn students loose in the laboratory, but molecular modeling and 
computational chemistry permit explorations -- and discovery.  We must use new 
tools in exploration, tools that can present problems in new formats.  We must 
address the pressing problems that exist at the chemistry-society interface: 
waste management, pollution in all its manifestations, risk assessment, health, 
agriculture, population control.   These issues also concern chemical industry  
-- the most valuable product of our enterprise.  We must create and teach an 
environmentally friendly chemistry .  Here I think a cosmetic change will help. 
 I suggest that we call our new enterprise Atomic and Molecular Science.  Let 
us draw every atom and molecule, whether in a living cell or in outer space, 
under our umbrella.  Why do Environmental Science departments exist?  Because 
we who teach chemistry have not done our job.  Why do we need a new chemistry?  
Because we do dumb things without thinking.  Consider a simple example: every 
organic chemistry text teaches chromium compounds as the reagents of choice for 
oxidizing alcohols to aldehydes or ketones. Industry can no longer use chromium 
oxidations, and we should neither use them nor teach them.  We need to reduce 
drastically our reliance on solvents -- Yes, we really do need a new chemistry. 
 If we involve our students in the effort to design a zero-waste plant lab now, 
perhaps one of them will some day design a zero-waste plant.  The task borders 
on the impossible, but our students are more optimistic than we are.  We must 
make every student understand the vital role of chemical industry in the U.S. 
economy, and we must make every student realize that economic considerations 
enter all rational decisions.  In a nation that borrows a billion dollars each 
day, teaching economic reality comprises the first responsibility of every 
educator.  We must subject ourselves and our enterprise to thorough evaluation 
by experts outside our discipline.  We have built a great research enterprise 
because we know what constitutes good research, but our educational enterprise 
is floundering because we do not know what constitutes good teaching.  
Evaluation must come from outside chemistry. I have as little faith in the 
evaluation of chemical education by chemical educators as I do in tort reform 
by attorneys. Cognitive scientists, statisticians, and humanists have a role in 
our evaluation, but we also need to revitalize evaluation research.  Let us 
agree to have external experts evaluate every course, every faculty member, 
every laboratory , every tool that we use.  We will reach our true potential 
only through an agonizing appraisal of our enterprise.  To prosper, we must set 
the standards for our teaching as high as those we have set for our research.  
In addition, we must discover new means for assessing student progress; I 
exhort you to explore new approaches. New courses and new learning tools will 
fail if we continue to use memory tests for student evaluation.  If our 
introductory courses rise to sufficiently high levels, we may find that we can 
dispense with grades.  If we make chemistry important, students will flock to 
our course. Students seek new ideas. But we are used to students who are 
required to stay in our hotel. Venturing into a free-market economy, where 
students can choose, poses problems for us.  In the introductory course, if we 
must choose between grades and access to the students, let us choose access to 
the students.
     Writing in the Los Angeles Times about our economic future, James Flanagan 
said  "A new world is being born in this decade, even as the old one is written 
off.  To profit from that you have to be nimble and change your thinking".
     I commend two statements to you as guides to this uncertain new world.
          Chemistry without exploration and discovery is history.
          Chemistry without people , economics, and policy is irrelevant.
Our quaint old hotel with its dark, empty rooms
cannot compete.  Refurbishing it will
serve our existing clientele better, but remodeling will not fill the empty 
rooms.  The structure is unsound.  We must demolish our old hotel so that we 
can build a new structure that will compete in a market economy.  But we 
ourselves are the quaint, Victorian enterprise.  We are the problem.  We must 
reorient and re-educate ourselves; we must undergo a mental and spiritual 
metamorphosis.  If we cannot, we must go.
     Let's use dynamite : now.
               Introductory Remarks for the NSF Workshop
               on Innovation and Change in Chemistry
Instruction
                    Seyhan N. Ege Department of Chemistry
University of Michigan
     Professor Chapman has issued an unexpected challenge to us: a severe one. 
Much of what has so far passed as innovation and change in the community of 
chemical educators has consisted of relatively minor changes in the content of 
courses, and the development of a few new laboratory experiments, mainly 
incorporating more instrumentation. In my more despairing moments I liken what 
is going on to the rearrangement of deck chairs as the Titanic sinks, a 
metaphor not unlike Professor Chapman's Victorian hotel with cracks in its 
foundation. I have been to many discussions of curricular change, especially 
for first year courses. Most discussions
seem to get bogged down on whether topic
X or Y or Z (choose one) belongs in the first year. Invariably there are calls 
too for the inclusion of new and exciting topics A or B or C (again you may 
take your pick). In conferences I have attended, I have not heard discussed how 
any one of the topics chosen increases a student's understanding of what it 
means to be a scientist though we all profess to be interested in that. I have 
not seen much discussion that convinces me that proponents of various contents 
are thinking beyond the necessity of conveying certain facts of chemistry, 
facts that we often mistakenly believe are needed by the captive clientele that 
Professor Chapman identifies for us, including our own majors. But what do we, 
as scientists, do with facts? How much of an understanding of our mode of 
operation do our students get? If I sound harsh, I speak from several years of
experience in shepherding curricular
change through my own department, and with an understanding of how 
extraordinarily difficult it is to have any innovation at all, let alone to 
have it approach what NSF calls "change." Why is this so? As the report of the 
NSF Workshop on Undergraduate Education in Chemistry,
convened almost exactly four years ago, put it:
     "Chemistry instruction at the introductory level has resisted numerous 
exciting advances
     and a substantial broadening of the discipline. The result has been a 
virtual fixation with
     topics and foundation concepts that served chemistry well during its early 
development
     as the central molecular science, but which, today, do not allow us to 
present chemistry
     as the dynamic, exciting enterprise that we know it to be. If the present 
course is
     followed to the limit, chemistry like Latin, soon could be regarded as a 
'dead' language."
     Exactly. Our Victorian hotel needs much more than a rearrangement of its 
furniture.
We do not excite students with our introductory
courses because we have inadvertently
isolated those courses from the subdisciplines where research creates renewal 
and excitement. To quote Professor Leland Allen, "General Chemistry is not a 
discipline. Nobody gets a Ph.D. in general chemistry. Nobody does research in 
general chemistry." And many of the topics that occupy "basic chemistry" 
courses turn out not to be basic at all, but in fact, some of the most abstract 
and difficult concepts there are. They are "principles" only for those who have 
enough experience in chemistry to see how disparate facts are unified by those 
principles. No wonder beginning students have trouble seeing a unifying theme 
in many of our courses.  No wonder we find it difficult to import the cutting 
edge of research into these courses. No wonder students cannot carry what they 
learn in these courses forward to an experience of how scientists use the known 
to model and predict the unknown, which is what engages and excites us in our 
-intellectual life. Mostly we are unable to share that intellectual excitement 
with our beginning students.
     Besides being a repository of useful facts, chemistry has much to offer as 
a liberal art, in teaching students to see relationships among seemingly 
disparate elements, to reason by analogy, to sort relevant from irrelevant 
data, to use symbols and language precisely. Mostly we abdicate our 
responsibility to teach the subject as a liberal art by the types of 
examinations we give for the sake of simplicity in grading. In spite of the 
increasing evidence in the literature of chemical education of the large 
difference between what we think we are teaching and what students actually 
learn, we are not, by and large, changing how we evaluate our students' 
learning. Any probing examination that expects anything beyond a memory of 
facts and an application of a few well-practiced algorithms, reveals tremendous 
student difficulties. Students have trouble reading a narrative, sorting out 
data that are given to them, understanding what a question requires, answering 
it in words, symbols, graphs, or structural formulas that they themselves must 
generate. Yet this is what they must do as professionals, whatever field they 
enter. To ask less of them deprives our students of real accomplishment that 
intrigues them and builds tremendous self-confidence.
     So while we are here to discuss how innovation can be encouraged, and how 
that which has taken place can be converted into real change, 
institutionalized, and disseminated in the community, I would raise the 
question, along with Professor Chapman, of whether the nature of our innovation 
is far-reaching enough. Some ways we can measure that, I will pose as questions 
for us to consider as we hold our group discussions.
     What is it that we, the faculty do when we conduct our research or educate 
ourselves in
     a new discipline? What are the mental processes by which we construct our 
new
     knowledge? Is there an artificial dichotomy between how we learn and how 
we teach
(that is, how we expect students to learn)?
     What are the goals of our courses? Is it mastery of a specific content'? 
Is it maturation
     as a scientific thinker? Is it the ability to solve problems (as opposed 
to finding the
answers to exercises)? Do we care whether our
courses increase or decrease a student's
     self-confidence? Is it relevant? How do we measure any or all of the 
above? Are our
     national tests performing a service or disservice? Is it only the students 
who need to be
     evaluated?
     Is it possible to organize our beginning courses so that their content 
remains close to the
     cutting edge of research? Is it possible to forgo our traditional 
"introductory" courses and
     plunge with students right into an examination of topics of significance, 
whether of
     environmental, medical, nutritional, or economic importance? Could not any 
one of these
     provide a context for a more significant introduction to a modern "Atomic 
and Molecular
     Science" than we now achieve? Can modern technology support such an 
innovation by
giving students tools with which they acquire
factual knowledge and a chance to practice
     basic skills as they need it?
How does a faculty renew itself to meet the
challenge of the need for a new kind of
chemical education? Is it enough to change the
content of our courses?
     These are questions that I bring to you from the process of curricular 
change that is underway at the University of Michigan. The issues I raise are 
very much alive in our department. In their own way they are dynamite.
                         PLENARY LECTURE
               Science Education, Who Needs It?
          Norman Hackerman Rice University and University
of Texas
The purpose of the support of faculty research should be to maintain 
originality, creativity, and enthusiasm in the faculty member with the view of 
inducing the same in the students. The outcome of the research, that is new 
science, should be seen as a bonus.
     The title has been used before (Hackerman, Norman, Science, 1992, 256, 
157) but is worthy of being repeated in order to provide again the simple 
answer - everyone. A more fully responsive answer might be everyone, because 
science, and more particularly technology, are part of human culture (the state 
of advancement of civilization) and therefore important to all of us.
     It is probably true, however, that none of us is interested in all parts 
of our cultures, and science is certainly no exception to this shortcoming. 
Nonetheless almost all of us should be as aware as possible of science, which 
is simply our understanding of nature and its ways, for two additional reasons. 
The first is so as to be at ease with nature, a much more complex problem than 
this simple statement suggests. The second is to be at ease with the sometime 
bewildering pace of technological advance.
Both of these reasons imply the desirability of
understanding research, development,
science, technology, and their interactions as well as their relationship to 
ultimate use. Another important aspect that deserves broad recognition and 
better integration into the societal mind is the effect of these factors on 
education. It is worth noting that the latter is an activity that occupies the 
full attention of perhaps a third of the country's population.
The scientific and engineering community has
acquired great stature over the last half
century. This is especially the case of the former, since engineers have 
enjoyed good standing since ancient times. Along with the increased stature 
have come certain stances, again especially of the scientific community.
     The first such involves our belief that only the practitioners of research 
in the sciences understand the domain. We have the tendency to believe that the 
zeal we have for our work and the methods we use are not understandable to 
others. Therefore, we sometimes adopt an attitude that says suitable support 
should be forthcoming because of the vital importance of our work. Related to 
this is the unsupported belief that science is a direct force on the economy. 
This is a belief held not only outside the community but inside it as well.
     A third position is less substantial, namely that there are two cultures, 
(Snow, C.P. The Two Cultures and the Scientific Revolution. New York
American Library, N.Y., 1964) and ours
is the important one. This is in part for the reasons given above and in part 
because, to many, science seems dominant. A fourth belief is that new science 
provides a direct lead-in to human longevity and better health.
     Except perhaps as related to health, none of these positions are truly 
acceptable. The two culture argument is untenable if the dictionary description 
of culture (as the state of advancement of civilization) holds. There can be 
only one culture and we are all in this together. It may be that there are two, 
or more, practices within the single culture and that may well be part of the 
problem.
The remaining two positions are somewhat
intertwined. Scientists' understanding of
nature summed over all of us in the field is indeed impressive. With only few 
exceptions, however, our vision and our vocabulary permit each of us only a 
narrow deep insight into nature. Our broader ignorance is tempered only by a 
basic understanding of the scientific process. In other words we are almost as 
much in the dark about science as are those we castigate for lack of scientific 
'literacy.' Any suggestion that support of our research is vital to society's 
welfare loses some of its force. Research may be our domain, but the support to 
which we have become accustomed is in a much broader domain. To expect that it 
not be in competition with some other more timely concerns is unwise. This 
brings us to the argument involving the
importance of science to the economy. Many
in industry and elsewhere believe that most industrial programs advance by 
evolutionary steps and depend primarily on factors such as financing, 
engineering, marketing, and the like. The science which is already available or 
obtainable 'on order' is sufficient for this purpose. This does not mean that 
science is not important. But of all the interdependent steps required, 
starting from an improved understanding of nature and ending with better 
products or services, the incorporation of new science is not the limiting one. 
Obviously whole new industries form from time to time on the basis of 
revolutionary ideas - provided it is understood that while scientific discovery 
may be a key step, it is not the only such in the sequence from raw science 
through technology to ultimate societal use.
The relation between research and human health
appears to be more solid. Here there
seems to be a more direct link between new research findings and the potential 
for improved human well being. Even here, however, the coupling between 
discovery and use is loose.
As was already noted, the stature of research
scientists and engineers has grown markedly
in the public eye since the close of the war of the 1940's. Indeed members of 
our community have input to decisions at high levels of the government. Add to 
such heady standing, the current use of prowess in research as the measure of 
academic achievement and it is not surprising that there is degradation of post 
12th grade education,
especially at the 13th and 14th level. This
neglect of teaching at the underclass level clearly has had detrimental effects 
on elementary and secondary school performance as well. The latter stems from 
ever increasing neglect by the science community of those students who might be 
fitted for and interested in precollege and community college teaching careers. 
This cohort has been lumped in with all others whose interests do not require 
major immersion in the sciences. It is worth calling attention to an important 
statistic, namely, that the whole scientific and engineering cohort numbers 
five million in this country. That is, we comprise 2% of the U.S. population, 
not vanishingly small but not overwhelming either. To carry this point further 
the largest estimate available for the number of research scientists and 
engineers in the U.S. is one quarter of a million, or 0.1% of the population. 
Using the figure of 2% and arbitrarily multiplying it by 5 to include those who 
require a science background in their profession, e.g., workers in the health 
field or patent attorneys, we find that 90% of those in college do not require 
an in-depth science background for their livelihood. These people plus the some 
60% of the population who do not go to college provide most of the wherewithal 
to support the Federal Government's research and development activities. Deep 
concern has been voiced about the availability
of interested and qualified individuals
to succeed those of us currently in place in the research community: the 
pipeline problem. For a time this concern centered on the question of 
successors to faculty positions particularly in research universities. This 
induced an almost hysterical response, which had the effect of still further 
diminishing faculty interest in non-science majors. This lack of interest in 
non-science majors could
well be detrimental in terms of a
potential weakening of our support base, which may already be underway. It is 
also consequential because this part of the cohort is perhaps the best source 
of K- 1 2 teachers, who could be given a real appreciation of science, 
research, development, technology, and teaching. Clearly the last statement is 
an opinion.
     Two other items deserve mention here. There is among some a perception of 
inequity in that 0.1% of the population received about 2.8% of the GNP in 1990 
as support for their work. Note, this does not include salaries and fringe 
benefits. Even if only a quarter of R&D spending goes to research, 0.7% of the 
GNP still goes for support of only 0.1% of the population, again excluding 
remuneration.
The second item relates to valuing faculty
activities. In research universities this has
swung from being based on too high a teaching to research ratio to too high a 
research to teaching ratio. Research is important in maintaining a steady 
stream of educated individuals, from scientists to accountants, to people our 
entire scientific and technological enterprise. Research is effective in 
maintaining creative faculty, which in turn fires up originality in students. 
The purpose of the support of faculty research should be to maintain 
originality, creativity, and enthusiasm in the faculty member with the view of 
inducing the same in the students. The outcome of the research, that is new 
science, should be seen as a bonus.
     Given that all of the above is valid, what is to be done? Insofar as 
grades K-12 are concerned, the important task for university faculty is to help 
form good elementary and secondary school teachers. As has already been noted, 
the science background of these teachers must be a matter of concern for the 
science faculty. Since current 13th and 14th level courses have not been 
successful in educating such teachers, it follows that a different approach is 
necessary.
     Presently such variations as are attempted remain based on a disciplinary 
approach. These fail for a number of reasons, such as the use of insider 
language instead of customer language, greater depth and breadth of discipline 
than the nonprofessional wishes to acquire, greater mathematics proficiency 
than many opt for, a perception that non-science majors are lazy or stupid or 
both, when for most part it is a flagging of interest in a topic about which 
many were originally curious. There are probably other reasons also. The 13th 
level course should be for all students and
be based on a better understanding
of nature. High standards of intellectual quality must be maintained, and 
laboratory and observational activities must be an integral part. Such a course 
can be seen as approaching the additional problem of a better understanding of 
science by the public at large since three to four million students a year 
would have the exposure. Many general science courses have been tried with 
little or no success. In general they have been watereddown disciplinary 
courses or superficial interdisciplinary courses with each discipline having a 
recognizable but not very enlightening segment.
Beyond the freshman year for those who major in
science or require it for their future
professional life the proper thing, of course, is to begin to delve into the 
appropriate discipline, still maintaining high standards of quality. At this 
point we should minimize unproductive barriers to those who are interested, but 
we should not induce the uncertain into the field. The last point is important 
since research and problem-solving are frustrating enough at times even for 
those fully self-motivated toward research as a career. The basis for the 
opening course, whether for non-
majors alone or for all, should be
nature and its components: forces, material, space, and time. The course must 
include the particulate nature of matter, its interchangeability with energy, 
the quantum quality of the latter, its relation to force, the origins of force, 
and so on. Being repetitious, it should use the language of those listening and 
not the code words of the insider. It should intertwine laboratory and other 
observations and it should use computers generously. It should keep 
uncertainty, anomaly, conundrum, and change always in the forefront. Such an 
approach provides a context for the introduction of ideas such as risk, risk 
assessment, how such knowledge affects us, and the place of science and 
technology in societal affairs. Such a course provides a rational basis for an 
introduction to the existence of the disciplines as well as the subdisciplines. 
In addition, the relative scientific narrowness of most practitioners can be 
clarified. Finally, the vital need for ever-expanding technology and the 
dependence of technology on science can be shown. In fact the system of 
progression from science to technology to use and the many types of 
participants, other than scientists and engineers, required by the system 
should be discussed.
     This course cannot be used as a precursor to courses in the individual 
disciplines but there are two avenues available to the non-science major whose 
interest is piqued enough to want to go further. One is to take the standard 
course in one or more fields according to taste and time. The other is to have 
courses available on generic societal problems of high technology
content. Examples
include those dealing with the environment, transportation, energy, health, 
construction, and the like.
     In sum we can do better in interesting students in science without making 
scientists of them. This requires leaving behind the belief that only those 
with deep interest in the field are intellectually capable of grasping its 
rudiments and of recognizing the importance of science to the entire human 
species.
WORKSHOP PARTICIPANTS
     (See list attached.  Information not on computer Disk)