This
site is a resource for those considering the Bio-Organic Chemistry First curriculum,
which presents a new approach to the college chemistry curriculum
that caters deliberately to biologists. A new curriculum in the chemistry
department at Juniata College allows for the easy introduction of
a great deal of biochemistry at the early stages of the study of chemistry.
Sixty
to eighty percent of students enrolled in introductory college chemistry
courses take those courses because they are required for a professional
or academic goal unrelated to chemistry. Although most of these
students are interested in the life sciences, most chemistry departments
offer a first-year course that is extremely physical and mathematical,
with little obvious application to biology students. This is followed
by an organic course that thoroughly surveys all the organic chemistry
a chemistry major needs—while including a great deal that biology
majors do not need and omitting much that they might find fascinating.
In
addition to acknowledging the academic needs of life science majors,
this new sequence provides chemistry majors with an early introduction
to the connections between chemistry and biology. This connectivity
is beneficial in its own right, but recently became more relevant
when the ACS’s
Committee
on Professional Training (CPT) declared that all approved chemistry
departments must cover the equivalent of one semester of biochemistry
as a required course. Biochemistry content can be offered as a separate
course or incorporated into the material covered by the other core
courses.