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“Chemistry in the Art Gallery” – Student-Teacher...
Journal article

“Chemistry in the Art Gallery” – Student-Teacher Perspectives on Developing and Delivering an Experiential Course Module at McMaster University

Abstract

For chemistry graduate students who aim to become instructors, intensive teaching training opportunities are valuable but can sometimes be hard to find. Here, we outline our engagement with one such “hidden” teaching opportunity at McMaster University in Hamilton, Canada. In May 2021 and 2022, our student-led team designed and taught “Chemistry in the Art Gallery,” a week-long undergraduate course module focused on gallery-relevant atmospheric chemistry and materials science. Because COVID-19 restrictions necessitated remote delivery of our module, we created and mailed lab kits to our students to provide them relevant, experiential learning opportunities through hands-on chemistry activities and assessments that they could complete at home. In this paper, we describe the content we created, evaluate how it was delivered, and discuss ways of expanding the module for integration into other classes. We reflect on our time creating and delivering new course objectives, lectures, activities, and assessments as well as on how this process supported our growth as instructors. Based on our experience, we argue that nontraditional teaching opportunities like this can benefit student instructors by empowering them to meaningfully contribute to educational content, and we encourage their expansion at other institutions.

Authors

McCallum K; Sharma M; Styler SA

Journal

Journal of Chemical Education, Vol. 101, No. 9, pp. 3757–3766

Publisher

American Chemical Society (ACS)

Publication Date

September 10, 2024

DOI

10.1021/acs.jchemed.4c00175

ISSN

0021-9584

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