Selected Product: | General Chemistry: The Essential Concepts (Hardcover) Hardcover Edition: 3rd Author: Raymond Chang Publisher: McGraw-Hill Companies Release Date: 2002-04-08 ISBN-10: 0072410671 ISBN-13: 9780072410679 List Price: $113.60 Average Customer Rating: | | Kaplan PCAT 2008-2009: Pharmacy College Admission Test (Kaplan Pcat) ISBN-10: 1419551558 ISBN-13: 9781419551550 List Price:$45.00 Schaum's Outline of Biology ISBN-10: 0070224056 ISBN-13: 9780070224056 List Price:$18.95 Biology ISBN-10: 0805366245 ISBN-13: 9780805366242 List Price:$142.67 Schaum's Outline Of General, Organic and Biological Chemistry ISBN-10: 0070476098 ISBN-13: 9780070476097 List Price:$17.95 General Chemistry: The Essential Concepts ISBN-10: 0073101680 ISBN-13: 9780073101682 List Price:$120.60 |
To use our price comparison to get the cheapest price, please click on the "Find the Cheapest Price" button located above for General Chemistry: The Essential Concepts (Hardcover) by Raymond Chang (ISBN-10: 0072410671, ISBN-13: 9780072410679). At this time we have not yet written a review for General Chemistry: The Essential Concepts (Hardcover) by Raymond Chang (ISBN-10: 0072410671, ISBN-13: 9780072410679). Please continue to keep checking back to this page as we are constantly adding reviews. Summaries and Customer Reviews are supplied by Amazon.com The third edition of General Chemistry: The Essential Concepts continues the tradition of presenting only the material that is essential for a one-year general chemistry course. As before, the text includes all the core topics that are necessary for a solid foundation in general chemistry without sacrificing depth, clarity, or rigor. The third edition features new Spartan molecular models, animations correlated to the text, the addition of molecular orbital theory and more. General Chemistry: The Essential Concepts is 200 to 300 pages shorter than traditional two-semester textbooks and is much less expensive. Dr. Chang's concise-but-thorough approach will appeal to efficiency-minded instructors and will please value-conscious students. Terrible. | Customer Rating: | On the back of this book:
"The tools that accompany General Chemistry: The Essential Concepts are designed to help you succeed in your general chemistry course. Please visit your bookstore to order these helpful supplements..."
Following this little note are no less than 6 highly recommended websites, workbooks, and OTHER textbooks to use just to understand this one textbook. I think a clearer message would read "Please purchase these materials, and set this book back on the shelf, thanks."
This book is so poorly organized that it makes my head spin. As mentioned by another reviewer, the tools for effectively learning material appear in chapters AFTER said material. This book features page-long discourses on the wonders of quantum physics and how amazing chemistry is, and information that hurtles so far above our heads that it knocks birds out of the sky. These walls of text have various sample problems interspersed throughout, but I can say that 3 sample problems are not enough to explain the 117 "practice" word problems that follow each chapter. (I counted)
I am glad that our teacher never touched this textbook throughout the semester, but we were required to read it on our own and no one understood it. The class after assigned reading homework, we needed an hour to an hour and a half long lecture on what a few sections in the book meant, put down simple understandable terms.
This book makes seemingly simple concepts way too complicated by throwing in information that only works to confuse the reader. The only useful items are the tables that appear in the appendix listing heats of formation, standard enthalpies, etc., which have an unusual amount of organization compared to the rest of the book.
If your goal is to learn chemistry, then stay away from this textbook. | Horrible book, that is my personal view | Customer Rating: | | This is the book that was assigned to my general chemistry class. Personally I think this is one of the most horrible books ever written, not just chemistry but on any subject. Even though the book says "General Chemistry" there is NO general overview of chemistry whatsoever in the chapters. The only thing that even comes close is the one page "A Note to the Student" thing that says chemistry is percieved as difficult. If the subject is difficult then it is the authors job to make it as simple as possible, which he clearly doesn't. Every chapter I have read gets way too detailed right off the bat. The equations that are given rarely have an explanation of where they came from; they take on a view of, "Here is the equation, now memorize it." They don't try to explain the relationship of the specific subject of chemistry on hand. Also, I think the chapters are out of order. I think some chapters should come before others. Lastly, the book has WAY too much information to be called a general chemistry book. I have been swamped with more information from chemistry than all of my other classes combined. I AM NOT EXAGERATING! Less than half way through the book they try to teach quantum mechanics/physics. It is just a poorly planned book for the coarse. I HIGHLY RECOMMEND YOU STAY AWAY FROM THIS BOOK!!! | Another Amazing Chang Text | Customer Rating: | | This text serves its purpose perfectly. It is very well-written and succint. Prof. Chang realizes that there is more to chemistry than solving problems...he does a fantastic job of presenting the essential concepts and then solving many sample problems. There's no way that a chemistry book can show an example of every type of problem; that expectation is unreasonable. This text seeks to teach students chemistry with the examples falling into place. | Another case of "too much for too little". | Customer Rating: | | This is a difficult book. Not as difficult as my Phys book, but difficult nonetheless. Perhaps that is the way with chemistry, but it was Chang's job to write a book that could be understood and comprehended. He failed. I resigned myself early in the semester to draw the depth of my chem knowledge from a supplements ("Chemistry", by McMurry and Fay and "Schaum's 3000 solved problems in chemistry"). This trully reminded me of physics in a way I had never before expected of a chemistry class - finding answers to problems out of thin air. The material is overly light and does NOTHING to sort through the jibber jabber in a clear and comprehensive way. Note to Mr. Chang: Sometimes it is not enough to be witty and write well; Sometimes students actually want to learn how to DO THE PROBLEMS YOU THEN ASSIGN TO US AT THE END OF EACH CHAPTER! This book is written for people who have another book (or person) to fall back on for a REAL explanation. Raymond (if I may call you that), you should come down to the trenches and see the devastation in your book's wake. |
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