Danette Goulet -- IN THE CLASSROOM
- Share via
* IN THE CLASSROOM is a weekly feature in which Daily Pilot education
reporter Danette Goulet visits a campus within the Newport-Mesa school
district and writes about her experience.
Large plastic goggles covered students’ faces as they dripped
hydrochloric acid into beakers filled with zinc.
They stood in pairs at scarred counter tops, with sinks in the center
flanked by gas spigots. At the front of the Newport Beach classroom were
orange tubs for sorting the various materials: black rubber stoppers,
glass beakers and test tubes, corks and rubber tubing.
Anne Baffert’s chemistry class at Newport Harbor High School was
conducting experiments with hydrogen. But the scene was so familiar it
could have been any high school chemistry lab in America -- including
mine.
My sense of nostalgia grew as I settled in with two girls and watched the
experiments unfold.
Juniors Nicole Matten and Becky Overton were following the directions on
their lab sheet like a recipe. Becky read the directions slowly and
carefully, tracking the text with her finger as Nicole carried out her
instructions.
A tube connected a beaker of zinc to a tub of water. The girls were
filling beakers with pure hydrogen gas by displacing the water in the
beakers with the gas, which was created when the hydrochloric acid was
added to the zinc.
Once four beakers and two test tubes were filled with the gas, they began
the experiments.
What did they learn? When a flame is put to a test tube of hydrogen, it
makes a popping noise. When a test tube of hydrogen is held upside down
and a flame put to it, it also makes a popping noise.
“So, what does that mean?” I asked. The girls both looked at me with
expressions that said “I have no idea.”
Next, they allowed 15 seconds’ worth of air into a beaker of hydrogen and
put a flame to it. Result: a louder popping noise.
But when they reversed that experiment ... no noise.
Nicole had an answer for that one. “That means hydrogen is lighter,” she
deduced.
The next mix was hydrogen and oxygen -- a combustible combination.
That discovery set off pure chaos across the room, as teams of 16- and
17-year-olds created their own miniature explosions. Boys snickered,
girls shrieked and everyone jumped as their neighbors’ experiments were
ignited.
Baffert, listening to the students’ conversations as they cleaned up the
lab, said the combustibility of hydrogen and oxygen is a popular topic
among students who conduct the experiment each year.
Odd, but no one ever seems to notice the condensation created in the
beakers. If they did, they would realizes what they already knew before
the experiments began -- that hydrogen and oxygen make water.
FYI
* WHO: High school sophomores and juniors in Anne Baffert’s chemistry
class
* WHAT: Students conduct hydrogen experiments
* WHERE: Newport Harbor High School
* MATERIALS: Zinc and hydrochloric acid = hydrogen + oxygen = water and
flames
* LESSON TAUGHT: Hydrogen and oxygen make water
* LESSON LEARNED: Hydrogen and oxygen are combustible
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.