I have just attended an excellent
talk
by James Hutchinson from University
http://darkwing .uoregon.edu/~hutchlab/greenchem/
<
font
size=2 color="#0039a6" face=Arial>Marta Gmurczyk,
Ph.D.
Manager |
Office of
High School Chemistry
Staff Liaison I Committee on Chemical Safety
T 202-452-210
5
| F 202-833-773
2
<
strong>www.acs.org<
/font>
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11;–––––––
ACS Chemistry for
Life
American
Chemical Society
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From:
DCHAS-L
Discussion List [mailto:DCHAS-L**At_Symbol_Here**list.uvm.edu] On
Behalf Of Chinyere Shaw
Sent: Sunday, March 21,
2010 1:27
PM
To:
DCHAS-L**At_Symbol_Here**list.uvm.edu
Subject: Re: [DCHAS-L]
Green
Chemistry
I took this innitiaves on 2008 when I was teaching a college
preparatory chemistry to 10 and 11 grade students at
I will be more than willing to talk further on this.
On Fri, Mar 19, 2010 at 10:13 AM, Michael Ochs <Michael.Ochs**At_Symbol_Here**asu.edu> wrote:
I am working with faculty to determine a “green chemistry” approach to a general chemistry class for university freshmen, i.e. Chemistry 101. The purpose of the approach is a safer and more sustainable teaching method as well as our lack of budget to support engineering controls for solvent use during the class. Currently, we are looking at the American Chemical Society (ACS) for possible leads. We are searching for contacts who may have taken this approach for their curriculum. If you know of anyone who has implemented such an approach can you please pass their contact information to me.
Thanks in advance,
Michael
Michael Ochs, CIH
Manager,
ASU Environmental Health & Safety
480.965.3580
Please visit our
website http://uabf.asu.edu/ehs_services
Please consider the environment before
printing
this email.
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