Capitalizing on an opportunity to recreate Augsburg College鈥檚 advanced organic chemistry class, assistant professor of chemistry, Michael Wentzel, has developed a highly attractive approach to a complicated subject matter. He forces his students to work together.
鈥淥riginally, I wanted to make it so everybody understood how to write a reasonable organic mechanism,鈥 said Wentzel. 鈥淏ut after taking a step back, my major goals became communications, and group work, and teaching students how to work together and how to communicate better as scientists.鈥
Each week Wentzel breaks his students up into teams of four. The groups are then given a simple assignment: prepare to send a randomly selected group representative to a guest lecture at the University of Minnesota.
After the lecture, each group is required to put together a presentation on what they feel is the essence of the subject matter. 鈥淓very person got a chance to be the point person for his or her group,鈥 said Wentzel, in reference to his first class. 鈥淚 wanted to see people work together. To force them to be uncomfortable.鈥
Inside the lab, Wentzel鈥檚 unique approach to teaching ensues. He delegates his workload by directing his students鈥 questions to other students. He assigns individual students specific pieces of lab equipment, has them write out instructions for that equipment, and then dubs them the go-to person for that instrument鈥檚 technical support moving forward.
The results of this interactive style of teaching are compelling. 鈥淭he biggest thing I鈥檝e seen is the students are confident in talking about science,鈥 he said.
Using the confidence learned in his class, some of Wentzel鈥檚 former students have landed internships and entry into competitive graduate degree programs following graduation from Augsburg. Wentzel is clearly proud. 鈥淲e had a Goldwater Scholarship winner and an honorable mention [this year]. These were kids that were in [my] classes,鈥 he said.
As for the class itself, Wentzel鈥檚 methods are driving enrollment. 鈥淵ou can imagine how many people are excited to take organic chemistry, let alone advanced organic chemistry,鈥 joked Wentzel. 鈥淚 think the most students to ever take the course at one time was maybe five students before I got it,鈥 he said. 鈥淎nd now we have [another] 20 or at least 15 people for next year. It鈥檚 been exciting.鈥
Editor鈥檚 Note: An integrated course design grant from Augsburg College鈥檚 Center for Teaching and Learning funded peer-review sessions and other opportunities allowing Wentzel to revise the advanced organic chemistry class.
Reprinted with permission. Article by Phil Meagher for JoVE, the Journal of Visualized Experiments. JoVE is a peer-reviewed journal dedicated to publishing methods and research in a visual format.
