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    Phyllis Hutchinson


    I graduated from Heidelberg College with a B.S degree. I have a masters degree from Wright State. I have been teaching in the district for 18 years. I also work at the Countryside YMCA in Lebanon. I like to travel, hike, play tennis, and other outdoor activities.

    Below is a description of the classes that I am teaching this year.

    Chemistry in the Commuity



    ChemCom® takes a different approach to the learning of chemistry. Each of the four units revolves around a societal question. This question creates a need to know chemistry to find a solution. The context of each question is a community: local, workplace, national, or global. The chemistry presented to the students builds upon the same vocabulary, thinking skills, problem solving and lab techniques as most traditional introductory chemistry courses. However in ChemCom® the student is lead to integrate what they have learned to see how it addresses issues in the real world. This is accomplished through many decision making activities that are a part of the course. It is the long term goal of the curriculum to present to the students the need and the skills to acquire technical knowledge to make intelligent decisions for themselves and for the communities in which they belong.


    The course is broken down into 4 units:

    Unit 1 : Supplying our water needs.
    Covers water us in the United States, density, symbols, formulas, equations, ionic compounds, solubility and solution concentrations

    Unit 2 : Materials: Structure and Uses
    Covers physical and chemical properties, predicting properties, trends in metal activity, atoms, chemical equations, molar masses, percent composition, linking properties to structure

    Unit 3 : Petroleum: Breaking and Making Bonds
    Covers hydrocarbon boiling points, automobile energy, heats of combustion, fuel sources

    Unit 4 : Air : Chemistry and the Atmosphere
    Covers graphing atmospheric data, applications of pressure, predicting gas behavior, using gas relationships, molar volume and reactions of gases, ideal gas laws, solar radiation, thermal properties of materials, trends in atmospheric CO2, acids and bases, interpreting the pH scale