Presenter: Richard J. Bray
Faculty Advisor: Dr. Ning Gao
Ext 6658, x2rbray@mx.stlawu.edu
Poster Presentation
Recent trends in teaching favor the use of authentic tasks. The
“real-world” applications associated with authentic tasks aids in retention
of the material by the students. Two laboratory procedures have been
adapted from college-level chemistry laboratory procedures, which exclusively
use household products as the reagents to help connect chemistry and students’
everyday lives. One procedure is an acid-base titration that helps
students determine which household products are acidic or basic, and introduces
them to titration. First, students will investigate which products
in their house are most acidic and most basic via litmus paper. The
students will then titrate the acidic and basic products (eg. lye or vinegar)
to determine the concentrations. he second procedure calls for students
to determine the chemical composition of a common household product by
way of identification reactions using other common products as reagents.
The lab spans over two days, the first is dedicated to perform the identification
reactions using pure, known chemicals and the household reagents to give
students a glimpse into what a positive reaction should resemble.
On the second day, the students are given a household product (e.g., baking
powder), a chemical flow chart, and the household reagents; the students
then perform the necessary reactions to determine the chemical composition
of the product. The goal of these two laboratory procedures is by working
with materials readily found in the home, the students will realize that
chemistry is not something talked about solely in the classroom, but chemistry
is indeed all around them.