CHEM-103 Fundamentals of General Chemistry
Course topics include: matter and
measurement, atomic structure, chemical bonding, molecular structure, chemical
reactions, stoichiometry, gases, solutions, thermochemistry, kinetics,
equilibrium, and nuclear reactions. The course provides an introduction to
inorganic chemistry and general chemical principles for students in the allied
health fields. Laboratory experiments require students to collect, analyze, and
interpret data to identify unknown chemical substances or properties.
Prerequisite
Eligible to enroll in
MATH-070
Hours Weekly
3 hours lecture, 3 hours lab weekly
Course Objectives
- 1. Design and perform chemistry experiment(s) to investigate an assigned laboratory scenario and
know and observe all safety rules. - 2. Analyze and interpret data collected in the laboratory.
- 3. Communicate fundamental concepts in chemistry using appropriate vocabulary, units, symbols,
and notations. - 4. Apply chemical principles, scientific reasoning, and appropriate mathematical techniques to
solve quantitative problems pertaining to, but not limited to, unit conversion, stoichiometry, gas
laws, solutions, kinetics, equilibrium, thermochemistry, and nuclear reactions. - 5. Apply chemical principles and scientific reasoning to answer qualitative questions pertaining to,
but not limited to, atomic and molecular structure, chemical reactions, chemical bonding
theories, molecular shapes and polarity, states of matter, and properties of matter. - 6. Explain allied health applications of chemistry in terms of fundamental chemical principles.
- 7. Evaluate and explain the reasonableness of a solution to a problem.
Course Objectives
- 1. Design and perform chemistry experiment(s) to investigate an assigned laboratory scenario and
know and observe all safety rules. - 2. Analyze and interpret data collected in the laboratory.
- 3. Communicate fundamental concepts in chemistry using appropriate vocabulary, units, symbols,
and notations. - 4. Apply chemical principles, scientific reasoning, and appropriate mathematical techniques to
solve quantitative problems pertaining to, but not limited to, unit conversion, stoichiometry, gas
laws, solutions, kinetics, equilibrium, thermochemistry, and nuclear reactions. - 5. Apply chemical principles and scientific reasoning to answer qualitative questions pertaining to,
but not limited to, atomic and molecular structure, chemical reactions, chemical bonding
theories, molecular shapes and polarity, states of matter, and properties of matter. - 6. Explain allied health applications of chemistry in terms of fundamental chemical principles.
- 7. Evaluate and explain the reasonableness of a solution to a problem.