Jon the Geek
Thinker
- Joined
- Aug 27, 2005
- Messages
- 229
I'm writing a college-freshman-level, majors general chemistry textbook. I can't go into a lot of detail right now (for contractual reasons), but so far I haven't run into anything that I've wanted to do that have spooked my editor or publisher at all.
I want to work skepticism and critical thinking into the book as much as possible, and I'd like suggestions. Help me shape some future scientists into better skeptics!
Some things I'm already doing:
* All section titles are questions, such as "What affects the pressure of a gas?" Throughout the section, the students are presented with data and guided through the answer to the question, rather than simply presented with "Boyle found that volume affects the pressure, P1V1 = P2V2. Charles and Gay-Lussac found that temperature affects the pressure, P1/T1 = P2/T2, etc." My goal is to take the mystery out of chemistry as much as possible; Boyle didn't divine Boyle's law, he simply summarized the data that he found in his experiments.
* Each chapter ends with a "How sure are we about ___?" section, such as "How sure are we about the gas laws and kinetic molecular theory?" (in which I'll introduce real gases, leading into the chapter on real gases and liquids). I want to stress that science may be a quest for truth, but we can never be certain that we've gotten to "the answer."
* In the first chapter, rather than simply throwing out the fundamentals such as SI units and precision vs accuracy, I am presenting a puzzle to be solved, and guiding the student using the scientific method, measurements, etc to solve the puzzle. This chapter ends with "How sure can we be?", rather than the usual "How sure are we...?", since I'm not presenting any specific laws or theories.
Your thoughts and suggestions would be greatly appreciated!
I want to work skepticism and critical thinking into the book as much as possible, and I'd like suggestions. Help me shape some future scientists into better skeptics!
Some things I'm already doing:
* All section titles are questions, such as "What affects the pressure of a gas?" Throughout the section, the students are presented with data and guided through the answer to the question, rather than simply presented with "Boyle found that volume affects the pressure, P1V1 = P2V2. Charles and Gay-Lussac found that temperature affects the pressure, P1/T1 = P2/T2, etc." My goal is to take the mystery out of chemistry as much as possible; Boyle didn't divine Boyle's law, he simply summarized the data that he found in his experiments.
* Each chapter ends with a "How sure are we about ___?" section, such as "How sure are we about the gas laws and kinetic molecular theory?" (in which I'll introduce real gases, leading into the chapter on real gases and liquids). I want to stress that science may be a quest for truth, but we can never be certain that we've gotten to "the answer."
* In the first chapter, rather than simply throwing out the fundamentals such as SI units and precision vs accuracy, I am presenting a puzzle to be solved, and guiding the student using the scientific method, measurements, etc to solve the puzzle. This chapter ends with "How sure can we be?", rather than the usual "How sure are we...?", since I'm not presenting any specific laws or theories.
Your thoughts and suggestions would be greatly appreciated!