Chemistry 14 : Experimental Chemistry
Dr. Carey S. Reed
Office: C-127 Smith
Telephone: ext. 5752
email: csr4@psu.edu
General Information
Text required:
- Experimental Chemistry Laboratory Manual for Chemistry
14, Altoona Edition, July 1997.
- Laboratory Notebook with permanently numbered pages
and duplicate carbon pages.
- Your Chem 12 text.
Safety:
Goggles will be worn at all times. Gloves will be
worn any time chemicals are being handled or glassware is washed.
Calculator required: Electronic
calculator capable of handling logarithms and exponential notation.
Prerequisites or concurrent: Chem 12.
Attendance:
University regulations state that a student should attend
every scheduled class (Policies and Rules for Students section 42-27).
Frequent absence from class in unacceptable. If you miss a class it
is your responsibility to determine what material, announcements, handouts,
graded papers, etc., were missed due to your absence. You should arrange
for one of your classmates to hold returned papers in the event you are absent
when papers are returned. I do not assume responsibility for holding
papers if you are not there to pick them up, or have not made arrangements
for someone else to pick them up. I will, of course, try to hold unclaimed
papers for a few days.
Makeups:
At my convenience before the end of the semester.
If you cannot makeup the lab before the semester ends you will be given a
0 for the lab.
Lab Report due dates: Usually one week from
the completion of the experimental work.
Lab with partners:
Separate reports will be written. If the lab data
was collected only by one of the partners then the partner without the data
will obtain a Xerox copy of the original data and include it with their
report. Partners lab reports have to be turned in together.
Lab Data:
All original data measurements must be promptly and properly
recorded directly into the lab notebook. Data recorded elsewhere is
subject to confiscation.
Lab Reports: The following is part of the laboratory
report:
- Cover page
- Original data pages/graphs
- Tables/Graphs
- Sample calculations
- Error estimates/sources of error
- Conclusions and results
- Safety Hazards of the Experiment
- Each item will be explained in class.
Quizzes:
Written quizzes may be given at the beginning of any laboratory
period. They will not be announced. They will cover the laboratory
and reading material assigned or announced for that day. The number
of quizzes is unspecified.
Grading:
Material
Points
Expt. #1
10
Expt. #2
20
Expt. #3
40
Handout
40
Expt. #5
10
Buret Test
10
Attendance
-5 each class missed
-3 for signif. tardiness
Lab Quizzes
+ 1 per question
Locker Condition 10
Max. Points
120 + lab quiz grades
Computing the Course Grade:
Percentage Grade
95 or more A
92 or more A-
88 or more B+
85 or more B
82 or more B-
75 or more C+
70 or more C
60 or more D
Less than 60 F
Dropping the Course:
Contact the Office of the Registrar, Mr. Petak, in room
111 Smith. No course can be dropped after the end of the drop period.
This date, and your final exam time and date, as well as other useful information
is always appended to the copy of course offerings for any semester.
This usually occurs just before or just after the THIRD scheduled examination
in this course (This semester, the third exam is scheduled before the last
day to drop). Caution! in dropping courses is advised because of a
maximum (during your entire PSU tenure) allowed number of credits you may
drop between the end of the "free" drop period until the end of the allowed
drop period (when you have to pay to drop).
Campus Statement on Academic Integrity, adopted by the
Altoona Campus Faculty Senate on March 19, 1985.
"Academic integrity is the pursuit of scholarly activity
free from fraud and deception and is an educational objective of this institution.
Academic dishonesty includes, but is not limited to cheating, plagiarism,
fabrication of information or citation, facilitating acts of academic dishonesty
by others, unauthorized prior possession of examinations, submitting work
of another person or work previously used without informing the instructor,
or tampering with the academic work of other students." (Policies and Rules
for Students. Section 49-20)
Consequences of Academic Dishonesty:
"The penalty for academic dishonesty in less serious
cases consists of a failing grade for the work or test where this misconduct
occurred. This decision is made by the instructor. For more serious
cases of dishonesty, the penalties are more severe, (including automatic
failure for the course, probation, suspension or expulsion from the University),
and formal due process procedures are available for the student and faculty
involved. Section 49-20 of the Policies and Rules for Students provides
the details on these procedures."
Scheduled Classes Not Met:
In Extraordinary circumstances (which have occurred
from time to time in the past, and which will occur from time to time in the
future), when classes are missed due to reasons other than instructor
illness, power failures, weather, and the like, in which the missed classes
are not made up), missed classes will be rescheduled if possible, in conjunction
with the Office of the Registrar. Any such rearranging and rescheduling
would be announced in class so that appropriate arrangement could be made
by all.
SCHEDULE FOR FALL 2000
You can download all of the above information in
PDF format so that it can be printed by clicking here.
To be able to Read the file will you need to have the freeAcrobat Reader
installed.
Home | Classes
Taught | Chemistry
6 | Chemistry
12 | Chemistry
13 | Chemistry 14 | Chemistry
15 | Chemistry
34 | Chemistry
35 | Chemistry
36 | Chemistry
38 | Chemistry
39 | PSU 3
Copyright © 2000, Last modified: 12/19/03
Carey S. Reed, Assistant Professor of Chemistry
127C Smith Building, 3000 Ivyside Park, Altoona, PA 16601
Phone: (814) 949-5752; E-mail: csr4@psu.edu