Interest in "threshold concepts"ideas that, once mastered, transform a student's thinking about the discipline has grown in recent years. Most chemistry educators relate to the idea that "aha"moments can propel students to a new level of understanding and thus help them retain foundational knowledge. Identifying threshold concepts in the various subdisciplines of chemistry can serve as a pedagogical tool when instructors design chemistry courses that guide students from a vague and disconnected understanding of individual course topics to a more nuanced, overarching comprehension of the subdiscipline. In the hopes of sparking a debate on the subject, we use this commentary to suggest three threshold concepts for Analytical Chemistry: (1) Statistics, (2) Molecular interactions, and (3) Chemical equilibria.
CITATION STYLE
Claus, M. J., Gionfriddo, E., Monahan, J., Whelan, R. J., & Vitha, M. F. (2023, February 14). Threshold Concepts in Analytical Chemistry. Journal of Chemical Education. American Chemical Society. https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.jchemed.2c00674
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