Pesticides in Drinking Water: Project-Based Learning within the Introductory Chemistry Curriculum

Meredith Howard
Department of Chemistry, California Institute of Technology, Pasadena, CA 91125
Patricia B. O'Hara and Jon A. Sanborn
Department of Chemistry, Amherst College, Amherst, MA 01002-5000
J. Chem. Educ., 1999, 76 (12), p 1673
DOI: 10.1021/ed076p1673
Publication Date (Web): December 1, 1999

Abstract

Public concern has been expressed regarding low-level contamination of public drinking water with "xenoestrogens", which are manmade compounds that act like the growth stimulant, estrogen. A new introductory chemistry module is described, which has as its central theme the measurement of trace levels of these xenoestrogens in the form of pesticides in the Town of Amherst's public drinking water. After a basic introduction to sample handling and measurement of pH, temperature, and conductivity, the students travel in small groups to several sites to collect water and perform preliminary characterization of their samples. In subsequent weeks, they learn to perform various analytical techniques such as solid-phase extraction, GC-MS, ELISA, and absorption spectroscopy to measure the levels of the pesticides DDT, DDD, DDE, methoxychlor, and endosulfan, all of which are potent estrogen mimics. In addition to individual lab reports, students are asked to combine their results and analyze the data set to determine the mean concentration and the statistical significance. Finally, they use molecular modeling to explore the three-dimensional structure of three pesticide families and compare these structures to the steroid hormones whose actions they are purported to mimic.

Keywords (Audience):

First-Year Undergraduate / General

Keywords (Domain):

Environmental Chemistry

Keywords (Pedagogy):

Problem Solving / Decision Making

Keywords (Subject):

Mass Spectrometry

Citing Articles

Citation data is made available by participants in CrossRef's Cited-by Linking service. For a more comprehensive list of citations to this article, users are encouraged to perform a search in SciFinder.

This article has been cited by 13 ACS Journal articles (5 most recent appear below).

  • Cover Image

    A Service-Learning Project Based on a Research Supportive Curriculum Format in the General Chemistry Laboratory

    John H. Kalivas
    Journal of Chemical Education2008 85 (10), 1410
    • A Service-Learning Project Based on a Research Supportive Curriculum Format in the General Chemistry Laboratory

      John H. Kalivas
      Journal of Chemical Education2008 85 (10), 1410

      This article describes a two-semester general chemistry laboratory teaching approach to assist students in gaining experience with science-process skills. The ultimate goal is successful completion of a second-semester service-learning project requiring ...

  • Cover Image

    Measurement of Iron in Egg Yolk: An Instrumental Analysis Experiment Using Biochemical Principles

    Kevin M. Maloney , Emmanuel M. Quiazon and Ramee Indralingam
    Journal of Chemical Education2008 85 (3), 399
    • Measurement of Iron in Egg Yolk: An Instrumental Analysis Experiment Using Biochemical Principles

      Kevin M. Maloney , Emmanuel M. Quiazon and Ramee Indralingam
      Journal of Chemical Education2008 85 (3), 399

      The generally accepted method to determine iron content in food is by acid digestion or dry ashing and subsequent flame atomic absorption spectrometry or inductively coupled plasma atomic emission spectrometry. We have developed an experiment that ...

  • Cover Image

    Progression of Chemometrics in Research Supportive Curricula: Preparing for the Demands of Society

    John H. Kalivas
    2007 970 (), 140-156
    • Progression of Chemometrics in Research Supportive Curricula: Preparing for the Demands of Society

      John H. Kalivas
      2007 970 (), 140-156

      This chapter describes teaching approaches used in the three laboratory courses general chemistry, quantitative analysis, and instrumental analysis that assist students to attain expertise with process skills needed for success. The courses use active ...

  • Cover Image

    Undergraduate Introductory Quantitative Chemistry Laboratory Course: Interdisciplinary Group Projects in Phytoremediation

    Debra L. Van Engelen , Steven W. Suljak , J. Patrick Hall and Bert E. Holmes
    Journal of Chemical Education2007 84 (1), 128
    • Undergraduate Introductory Quantitative Chemistry Laboratory Course: Interdisciplinary Group Projects in Phytoremediation

      Debra L. Van Engelen , Steven W. Suljak , J. Patrick Hall and Bert E. Holmes
      Journal of Chemical Education2007 84 (1), 128

      In this interdisciplinary laboratory course, groups of beginning students complete semester-long projects studying soil chemistry, plant uptake of metals, and environmental analysis while applying their knowledge to the research area of phytoremediation. ...

  • Cover Image

    Deuterium Exchange in Ethyl Acetoacetate: An Undergraduate GC–MS Experiment

    C.D. Heinson , J. M. Williams , W. N. Tinnerman and T. B. Malloy
    Journal of Chemical Education2005 82 (5), 787
    • Deuterium Exchange in Ethyl Acetoacetate: An Undergraduate GC–MS Experiment

      C.D. Heinson , J. M. Williams , W. N. Tinnerman and T. B. Malloy
      Journal of Chemical Education2005 82 (5), 787

      A simple experiment involving deuterium exchange of the enolizable protons in ethyl acetoacetate followed by GC–MS has been developed. The principles demonstrated are the use of stable isotopes, keto–enol tautomerism, base catalysis, and the use of ...

Tools

SciFinder Links

SciFinder subscribers:  Click to sign in | Not a SciFinder subscriber? Learn more at www.cas.org

Explore by:


History

  • Received: August 03, 2009

Recommend & Share

  • Share on ACS NetworkACS Network
  • Add to FacebookFacebook
  • Tweet ThisTweet This
  • Add to CiteULikeCiteULike
  • Add to NewsvineNewsvine
  • Digg ThisDigg This
  • Add to DeliciousDelicious

Related Content