P. L. Olympia, Jr. University of the District of Columbia-Van Ness 4200 Connecticut Avenue. N.W. Washington. D.C. 20008
Present-day technology has left in its wake massive mounts of information which somehow must be communi:ated, digested, and absorbed. The impact of the so-called nformation boom is felt increasingly hy the typical chemical !ducator who, today, tends to spend more and more time .eading and writing technical reports and preparing instruc:ional materials. Although the amount of information with which we must cope has undergone an exponential growth in .he last two decades our manner of communicating ideas via .he orinted . oaee " essentiallv has remained unchanaed. 1; our daily struggle to cope with paper mounta&s the derelooment of soeed-readina skills has helped to some extent. In speed-reading, of courseywe are taughcnot to read the way we write-not to read sentences word by word hut rather to ;can paragraphs for essential ideas. However, if speed-reading were to he our only answer to today's problem of coping with I jungle of printed matter urcwmdd not he tolance. hut also more seriouslv, be:ause speed-reading is a one-way improvement that applies xfter the f a c t a limited cure where we most need prevention. For, indeed, if we were supposed to scan ~aragraphsonly to mnt for main ideas why should we write paragraphs in the irst place? What we need is a "paragraph-less" way of writing ,hat presents ideas without unnecessary transitional phrases. rhat, in fact, is the essence of "information-mapping." This paper describes the use of information mapping in :hemistry and in other related sciences. It is intended prinarily for the modern chemical educator who, in typical Washineton "bureaucratese." is "information-impacted." I t interest to those who are engagedin compes of ;encv-based courses such as PSI chemistry courses who typcall; are faced with preparing a great number of instructional ind learning module^.^
.m"p:XI.D.c.
/I/lelWr/ ITIUCTUnEI Ll.lln.rlan
Dls.,lpLlOn
cm
kso"s"cs stc"1.
.11
'1
.v,,,
"
1
. . L C
r...
...a
l
_.I.."Y,
.I,
.^
in
l Y,ll.,,_"
.,i.ilY.,
'.>.l..l.
...I
,..a
c,
..,CC...
I...
pus q u a p q s jo urrulaae p l n m aql ol 7! pasn aAeq am sLem aq? lo amos ?no lurod M pue Bmddem uorlemro:nr ol uollanp
'alqq a!po!rad aql uo appom [euo!$anqsu! ue jo q u a u o d m a sno!reA apqsnll! L pue 'g 'g salnZ!d ,'alaqM -asla paqpasap ale uogaas qaea ~ o safd!au!rd j u8!sap aq&
."...,.,.,,,... ..* ...
..>
Y O ,
A
% , . ,
.",I"
...,.s
...., .,.") ..,.,..,.,'.",
.I., .I",,>:. .uo, 4 ) . l . i .li.Y.
..,v
J
Ailll.,.
-qns pue qaolq ap!nbd.ia,d aql is q m i sy3olq uo!)em~ojr~! uo!lnmloju!,, ae alqegluap! .il!pea'jn ~ S ! S U I I J I ~ ..'dew-o~aeu~ 'mla) e UJODO) '.C[[ea~s! alnpow puo!l.Inl)su! ur adesn lnu u1 ~ s a.. % .n ~ a i -qo 30 dnors aql jo k a l s e m aaaqae q ' f i a q a p jo apom u! lajj!p d l p s n qaqm (,,sapporn Bu!umal,,) saaey3ed sa!p!qae %u!uieal luapA!nba Bu!a[onu! sAemq?ed aleuraqe seq quapn7s po!Aeqaq pauyap-llam arum ro auo jo Kralsem l u a p n p ?!mad 0%pau%!sap s! alnpom q a e 3 q u n Lpnqs
v .san!laa[qo
.",', ..i".d0ld
s"xpY.dl.I.~I
sy2 . ,.su
.,.-u,
,.,>I a",, rnl'>l.Y,
.u
). lz,l
-2us-rxr
'"7l.i
,.","
',.I>m., .. -3 irwr . u o w > r r "dC'."' ","&S.
,r*,
ry,
an,*
"1
ry, " 7
...
"S"'""
'"3"""'
I.uo,z.r. .
a*...
a
"u,.r*,a*p ;ie 1' 1.11 c d"I11. 01 i1Q.l
.IYW
.,YW.l.
allno= 1
ry, " W '"3 .I.,b
PY.
a",
.I'I>Y.,O~
"I
IYYY'
..
..Wllld
s,"'Y'
.>-*"= 1I.1".
,,m>xo, ,no< "0 'I
10,.rD
U,
rsn
..
.m
.m=.,o
.V1
.*,'",.,.odY,..l. .,p',.d 'Y,
.p".,
e, qql
I. Sl,*U*
,,,.,
.ap>.
.w
.,l",ld
I"IVY.d.P.SIP .-$.a) .*,,id01d pur .nrpY l l r l r l i o r a, r1g.2 . l ~ . , a r d sy, .iY02.
"'
. ' , " , > . ~ . " e 2 , . , *
"'"
0
*,.>"=,">.a,
I..".
SY,PY-.D.
..,.lrd.ld
>
PYe
'I,m,,drr..,or,.
" ' X W