Monday, April 14, 2008
Mon-Day 1
Bio- tomorrow you'll take your Mendelian and Modern Genetics Exam, the first exam of our LAST quarter. I'm a big fan of "all's well that ends well", a BIG fan! So, let's get started with some great results this quarter and end with some top Regents scores, all of which will reflect well on your FINAL course grade (the ONLY grade that counts towards your record).
Today we discussed reproductive and therapeutic cloning as well as stem cell research. We also covered some of the test objectives; I'll post the rest of the explanations on Blackboard by 6PM.
Chem 7- we defined a quantitative measure of solution concentration called "MOLARITY", which has units of moles per liter and is symbolized by "M". We did several permutations of problem types involving molarity and we discussed how solutions are made.
For lab tomorrow, bring in a water bottle (Nalgene optional), which we will use to make some concentrated solutions (lemonade, etc.).
Chem 8/9- we defined a quantitative measure of solution concentration called "MOLARITY", which has units of moles per liter and is symbolized by "M". We did several permutations of problem types involving molarity and we discussed how solutions are made.
We then set up our "precipitate Bingo" lab sheets by predicting the double replacement reactions between pairs of aqueous solutions.
Today we discussed reproductive and therapeutic cloning as well as stem cell research. We also covered some of the test objectives; I'll post the rest of the explanations on Blackboard by 6PM.
Chem 7- we defined a quantitative measure of solution concentration called "MOLARITY", which has units of moles per liter and is symbolized by "M". We did several permutations of problem types involving molarity and we discussed how solutions are made.
For lab tomorrow, bring in a water bottle (Nalgene optional), which we will use to make some concentrated solutions (lemonade, etc.).
Chem 8/9- we defined a quantitative measure of solution concentration called "MOLARITY", which has units of moles per liter and is symbolized by "M". We did several permutations of problem types involving molarity and we discussed how solutions are made.
We then set up our "precipitate Bingo" lab sheets by predicting the double replacement reactions between pairs of aqueous solutions.