This ... is ... chemistry
Indulata Prasad
A recent round of “Jeopardy!” made students in Joe Havens’ chemistry
class a little rowdy, cheering and often speaking out of turn in the
haste to answer correctly first.
“They get to be a little bit more of themselves because of the
game type of environment,” Havens said.
Havens put together a “Jeopardy!” quiz based on the unit the Costa
Mesa High School class had just completed on ionic bonds.
Categories were created according to sections of the unit --
chemical names of compounds, formulas, ions, valence electrons,
potpourri and salts.
Eager hands went up when Havens called for three student
volunteers to be the ombudsman, scorekeeper and computer operator
during the game. The class, a mix of freshman to senior students, was
divided into five groups. To encourage participation, Havens offered
the winners extra credit.
Students admitted the lesson was tough but said the competition
made it fun. While some students had problems remembering and
distinguishing new words, like polyatomic ion, anion and oxy anion or
isoelectronic, others found the math involved more daunting.
“The course itself is hard, chemistry itself is hard, chemical
reactions are hard,” junior Kyle Thorsness said. “It was a good
class. It’s all fun but in a good way.”
Nicole Kapp, 17, said games like “Jeopardy!” prove helpful to
students only if they pay attention. Even though she understands the
periodic table, Nicole said she finds the math difficult.
“Finding out the ionic numbers is definitely the most difficult
because it has to do with math, and I am not good at math,” she said.
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