All of our examinations this semester will be in PS141.
Exam #1 is scheduled for 5:30 p.m. Thursday, February 4, 1999
in PS141. You will have approximately 60 minutes.
Here are a number of questions
taken from several CHEM 1314 examinations used in the Fall 1997
semester as representative examples of questions that could
appear on our first hour exam. Please note that all I did was
select appropriate questions from the CHEM 1314 examinations. As
a result the length and the number of questions on our exam will
different from what I have provided here.
Exam #2 is scheduled for 5:30 p.m. Thursday, March 4, 1999 in
PS141. You will have approximately 60 minutes.
Here are a number of questions taken
from several CHEM 1314 examinations used in the Fall 1992
semester as representative examples of questions that could
appear on our first hour exam. Please note that all I did was
select appropriate questions from the CHEM 1314 examinations. As
a result the length and the number of questions on our exam will
different from what I have provided here.
Exam #3 is scheduled for 5:30 p.m. Thursday, April 8, 1999 in
PS141. You will have approximately 60 minutes. The third exam
will cover the material in our textbook beginning on page 15.3
through lecture on Monday, April 5, 1999 (this lecture should
cover Section 17.1).
Here are a number of questions
taken from several CHEM 1515 examinations used in past semesters
as representative examples of questions that could appear on our
third hour exam. Please note that all I did was select
appropriate questions from the CHEM 1515 examinations. As a
result the length and the number of questions on our exam will
different from what I have provided here.
Here is the tentative Useful
Information page for our Exam #3. There are not many
mathematical relationships that we discussed for this exam. We
covered lots of mathematical problems! The only one I could come
up with was M1V1 = M2V2 and
I figured you would remember it so I did not put it on the Useful
Information page. If you think there is a relationship, which is
not a definition, which should be on the Useful Information page
let me know.
Exam #4 and Exam #5 is scheduled for Friday, May 7,
1999 at 10:30 a.m. - 12:20 p.m., PS141. You will have
approximately 110 minutes. Exam #4 will cover the material in our
textbook in Chapter 17, 18 and 20. Remember we also discussed how
to calculate the pH of weak acid and weak base solutions. Check
your notes and PS14.
Here are a number of questions taken
from several CHEM 1515 examinations used in past semesters as
representative examples of questions that could appear on our
fourth hour exam. Please note that all I did was select
appropriate questions from the CHEM 1515 examinations. As a
result the length and the number of questions on our exam will
different from what I have provided here.
Here is the tentative Useful
Information page for our Exam #4.
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