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Studying Chemistry at Reed College
Reed College is a four year undergraduate
liberal arts college located in Portland, Oregon. The College offers
Bachelor of Arts degrees in chemistry,
biochemistry and molecular biology,
and chemistry-physics. Reed students
can also study chemical engineering by combining studies at Reed with
studies at another institution (see Dual Degree
Program).
Chemistry is unique among the sciences in that it studies interactions
between matter and energy at the atomic level. Why focus on atoms?
Consider this - all of the matter that we see around us, a bird,
a rock, or a computer screen, is made entirely out of atoms, yet there
are only 80 or 90 kinds of atoms. How can such a small set of atomic building
blocks produce so many different kinds of matter? The answer lies in the
combining power of atoms. Putting atoms together in different combinations
and arrangements creates different kinds of matter. This makes chemistry,
which is the study of the "what, how, and why" of atom combination,
an essential tool for understanding the natural world.
The Reed chemistry program is designed to give students a broad, yet deep,
understanding of chemical phenomena. Most courses, beginning with Chem
101 (Molecular Structure and Properties) include substantial laboratory
work in order to give students first-hand experience with these phenomena,
and to teach experimental skills used by practicing chemists.
An increasingly important aspect of laboratory work is learning to use
scientific instrumentation. Reed students learn to use a broad array of
instruments, including a gas chromatograph-mass spectrometer (GC-MS),
Fourier transform IR spectrometers (FT-IR), a superconducting 400 MHz
Fourier transform NMR spectrometer (FT-NMR), an x-ray diffractometer,
and a 250-kilowatt nuclear reactor.
Another important aspect of laboratory work is learning to interpret experimental
data, and students learn to use molecular modeling programs to create
conceptual models that assist with data analysis.
The Reed chemistry program culminates in the senior year with the senior
thesis, a two-semester research investigation of an unexplored area
of scientific interest. The thesis investigation is typically conducted
as a collaboration between the student and a faculty mentor.
The senior thesis is required of all Reed students, and is undoubtedly
the most distinctive feature of a Reed College education. Students and
faculty are drawn to Reed because they are seekers. They are excited
about science. They are naturally inclined to ask questions, and they
are inspired by the challenges that one encounters while doing original
scientific research. Senior thesis projects provide an exceptional opportunity
to integrate all that one has learned, target it on the unknown, and
make a lasting contribution to scientific knowledge. The commonplace
of tomorrow is being created in Reed's laboratories today.
More readings:
- Facts about Reed
(compiled by Reed's Office of Institutional Research)
- NSF-AIRE Award (In 1999
the National Science Foundation gave awards to 10 institutions for
integrating undergraduate research and instruction. Learn about Reed's
award-winning science program, especially Chemistry)
- "Why I Studied Chemistry"
(reprinted from C&E News,
the weekly news journal of the American Chemical Society)
- Green Chemistry (chemical technology for a sustainable future -
under construction)
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