Episodes

  • How can chemistry teachers learn from each other?
    Jul 6 2026

    Great teaching doesn’t happen in isolation—it happens in community. In this bonus BCCE Community Conversation preview, Melissa talks with chemistry educator Dr. Joanne Stewart about communities of practice: groups of educators who come together to share ideas, solve problems, and help one another grow. They explore why teaching is hard to improve on your own, how these communities support both faculty and students, and why meaningful change in chemistry education depends on building relationships, not just sharing resources.

    Important Links

    • Submit a Question for Community Conversations
    • bcce.divched.org/2026
    • YouTube.com/@chemforyourlife
    • chemforyourlife.com
    Timestamps
    • 0:00 – Introducing the BCCE Community Conversation series
    • 2:40 – Meet Joanne Stewart and her work in chemistry education
    • 5:10 – What is a community of practice?
    • 8:20 – How educators can get involved (even as a “lurker”)
    • 11:50 – Sharing teaching resources and learning from one another
    • 15:30 – Building a “community of communities” in chemistry
    • 18:50 – What this year’s Community Conversation will explore
    • 23:50 – Why lasting educational change requires strong networks
    • 29:20 – BCCE events, communities to explore, and final invitations
    Support this podcast on Patreon

    Buy Podcast Merch and Apparel

    Check out our website at chemforyourlife.com

    Watch our episodes on YouTube

    Find us on Instagram, Twitter, and Facebook @ChemForYourLife


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    33 mins
  • Ask a Chemist: Is Silicone actually safe? (and other questions)
    Jul 2 2026

    What happens when some listeners challenge one of our past episodes? This week we’re revisiting our silicone episodes after several listeners pointed us toward new research. Along the way we answer questions about mosquito wristbands, waterproof mascara, stubborn adhesives, and whether amino acids may have formed on the early Earth after all. It’s an Ask a Chemist episode full of updates, follow-ups, and a reminder that science is always a work in progress.

    Support this podcast on Patreon Buy Podcast Merch and Apparel

    Check out our website at chemforyourlife.com

    Watch our episodes on YouTube

    Find us on Instagram, Twitter, and Facebook @ChemForYourLife

    Timestamps

    • 0:00 – Revisiting our silicone episodes after new research
    • 2:00 – Does silicone really leach into food, and should we be worried?
    • 10:30 – What we know (and don’t know) about silicone safety
    • 17:30 – Do mosquito patches and wristbands actually work?
    • 23:30 – How does waterproof mascara stay waterproof?
    • 27:20 – A chemistry detour: removing paint and stubborn adhesives
    • 30:20 – The Miller–Urey experiment and the origin of amino acids
    • 33:20 – Wrap-up + send us your chemistry questions

    References from the Episode:

    Thanks to our monthly supporters
    Sara Hull
    Dog Day Dan
    Bri .
    Summer Alden
    Amanda Raymond
    Kyle McCray
    Justine
    Ash
    Vince W
    Julie S.
    Heather Ragusa
    Autoclave
    Dorien VD
    Scott Beyer
    Jessie Reder
    J0HNTR0Y
    Cullyn R
    Erica Bee
    Elizabeth P
    Rachel Reina
    Letila
    Katrina Barnum-Huckins
    Suzanne Phillips
    Venus Rebholz
    Jacob Taber
    Brian Kimball
    Kristina Gotfredsen
    Timothy Parker
    Steven Boyles
    Chris Skupien
    Chelsea B
    Avishai Barnoy
    Hunter Reardon

    Support this podcast on Patreon Buy Podcast Merch and Apparel

    Check out our website at chemforyourlife.com

    Watch our episodes on YouTube

    Find us on Instagram, Twitter, and Facebook @ChemForYourLife


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    36 mins
  • How can we apply chemistry to real-world problems in the classroom?
    Jun 29 2026

    What if chemistry classes were organized around real-world problems instead of chapters in a textbook?In this bonus BCCE Community Conversation preview, Melissa talks with Vicente Talanquer about helping students think like chemists rather than simply memorize chemistry. They explore why authentic, real-world problems can transform learning, how instructors can make meaningful changes without rewriting an entire course, and why teaching chemistry is about developing a way of thinking—not just delivering content.

    Important Links

    • Submit a Question for Community Conversations
    • bcce.divched.org/2026
    • YouTube.com/@chemforyourlife
    • chemforyourlife.com
    Free resources Chemical Thinking Curriculum Structure: https://sites.google.com/site/chemicalthinking/structure

    More on Chemical Thinking Curriculum: https://sites.google.com/site/chemicalthinking/

    General Chemistry - CLUE textbook & activities: https://www.chemistry.msu.edu/clue/general-chemistry.aspx

    Organic Chemistry OCLUE textbook & activities: https://www.chemistry.msu.edu/clue/organic-chemistry.aspx

    Time Stamps

    0:00 – Why Melissa loves BCCE and chemistry education 2:50 – Meet Ellen Yezierski and the idea of scholarly teaching 4:00 – Moving beyond intuition and using evidence to improve teaching 6:35 – What chemistry educators can learn from cognitive science and education research 8:30 – The biggest challenge: finding time to improve your teaching 11:00 – Why conferences and community matter for innovation 13:45 – Barriers to evidence-based teaching and the risk of changing what’s familiar 16:20 – Applying the same scientific scrutiny to old teaching methods 19:40 – A practical first step toward scholarly teaching 21:00 – Finding useful teaching research without getting overwhelmed 25:20 – Meet the panelists and the ideas they’ll bring to BCCE 29:10 – How the Community Conversation will work 32:35 – Why good teachers are made, not born 34:00 – Filling your teaching cup back up at BCCE

    Support this podcast on Patreon

    Buy Podcast Merch and Apparel

    Check out our website at chemforyourlife.com

    Watch our episodes on YouTube

    Find us on Instagram, Twitter, and Facebook @ChemForYourLife


    Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.

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    35 mins
  • How do forensic scientists find fingerprints?
    Jun 25 2026

    There are a lot more ways to reveal a fingerprint than the black powder you see on TV.In this second part of our forensic chemistry series with Nicki Stewart, we explore the surprising chemistry behind fingerprints. From powders and iodine vapor to super glue fumes and chemical reactions, we break down how forensic scientists reveal invisible fingerprints—and why choosing the right method depends entirely on the surface, the chemistry, and the evidence they’re trying to preserve.

    Support this podcast on Patreon Buy Podcast Merch and Apparel

    Check out our website at chemforyourlife.com

    Watch our episodes on YouTube

    Find us on Instagram, Twitter, and Facebook @ChemForYourLife

    • 0:00 – What are fingerprints, really?
    • 5:30 – What’s actually left behind when you touch something?
    • 9:20 – The two main categories of fingerprint detection
    • 14:00 – How fingerprint powder actually works
    • 18:40 – Iodine fuming and why fingerprints disappear again
    • 25:25 – Revealing fingerprints on sticky tape
    • 29:40 – Ninhydrin and the chemistry behind purple fingerprints
    • 35:05 – The surprising science of super glue fuming
    • 42:20 – Why collecting fingerprints is much harder than TV makes it look
    • 46:10 – Jam’s biggest takeaways from fingerprint chemistry

    References from the Episode:

    Thanks to our monthly supporters
    Sara Hull
    Dog Day Dan
    Bri .
    Summer Alden
    Amanda Raymond
    Kyle McCray
    Justine
    Ash
    Vince W
    Julie S.
    Heather Ragusa
    Autoclave
    Dorien VD
    Scott Beyer
    Jessie Reder
    J0HNTR0Y
    Cullyn R
    Erica Bee
    Elizabeth P
    Rachel Reina
    Letila
    Katrina Barnum-Huckins
    Suzanne Phillips
    Venus Rebholz
    Jacob Taber
    Brian Kimball
    Kristina Gotfredsen
    Timothy Parker
    Steven Boyles
    Chris Skupien
    Chelsea B
    Avishai Barnoy
    Hunter Reardon

    Support this podcast on Patreon Buy Podcast Merch and Apparel

    Check out our website at chemforyourlife.com

    Watch our episodes on YouTube

    Find us on Instagram, Twitter, and Facebook @ChemForYourLife


    Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.

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    55 mins
  • Are there new, improved ways to teach chemistry?
    Jun 22 2026

    What does it mean to teach chemistry like a scientist? In this BCCE Community Conversation preview, Melissa talks with chemistry education researcher Ellen Yezierski about scholarly teaching: making evidence-guided decisions about how we teach and how students learn. They discuss why content knowledge alone isn’t enough, how educators can improve their teaching without becoming full-time researchers, and why some of the best chemistry teaching ideas come from asking better questions about learning.

    Important Links

    • bcce.divched.org/2026
    • YouTube.com/@chemforyourlife
    • chemforyourlife.com

    Time Stamps

    0:00 – Why Melissa loves BCCE and chemistry education 2:50 – Meet Ellen Yezierski and the idea of scholarly teaching 4:00 – Moving beyond intuition and using evidence to improve teaching 6:35 – What chemistry educators can learn from cognitive science and education research 8:30 – The biggest challenge: finding time to improve your teaching 11:00 – Why conferences and community matter for innovation 13:45 – Barriers to evidence-based teaching and the risk of changing what’s familiar 16:20 – Applying the same scientific scrutiny to old teaching methods 19:40 – A practical first step toward scholarly teaching 21:00 – Finding useful teaching research without getting overwhelmed 25:20 – Meet the panelists and the ideas they’ll bring to BCCE 29:10 – How the Community Conversation will work 32:35 – Why good teachers are made, not born 34:00 – Filling your teaching cup back up at BCCE

    Support this podcast on Patreon

    Buy Podcast Merch and Apparel

    Check out our website at chemforyourlife.com

    Watch our episodes on YouTube

    Find us on Instagram, Twitter, and Facebook @ChemForYourLife


    Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.

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    37 mins
  • How does super glue glue things?
    Jun 18 2026

    #061

    Be honest. Have you ever glued yourself with super glue? Everyone should accidentally make that mistake at least once, so you can literally feel the impressive stickiness of super glue. Well today, you can learn about the chemistry within super glue, without putting any fingers or other body parts at risk! Let's do this.

    References from this episode

    1. Introduction to Polymers R.J. Young and P. A. Lovell
    2. http://www.chm.bris.ac.uk/motm/superglue/superglueh.htm
    3. https://www.chemistryworld.com/podcasts/cyanoacrylate/6261.article
    4. https://pubsapp.acs.org/cen/whatstuff/86/8624sci5.html
    5. https://www.acs.org/content/dam/acsorg/education/students/highschool/chemistryclubs/March_ChemClubCal.pdf
    6. https://www.acs.org/content/dam/acsorg/education/resources/highschool/chemmatters/articlesbytopic/bonding/chemmatters-dec2006-glue.pdf
    Find us on Instagram, Twitter, and Facebook @ChemForYourLife. Email us at chemforyourlife@gmail.com

    Thanks to our monthly supporters

    • Ciara Linville
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    Support this podcast on Patreon

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    31 mins
  • How could technology and A.I. change chemistry education?
    Jun 15 2026

    AI is everywhere in education right now, but is that the only technology chemistry educators should be thinking about?

    In this bonus BCCE preview episode, Melissa talks with Resa Kelly about technology in chemistry education, from visualizations and videos to flipped classrooms and AI. What do we actually want students to be able to do in a technology-rich world? How should that shape our teaching? And how can educators stay curious without feeling pressured to adopt every new tool that comes along?

    Important Links

    • bcce.divched.org/2026
    • YouTube.com/@chemforyourlife
    • chemforyourlife.com

    Time Stamps

    • 0:00 – Introducing the Community Conversation on technology
    • 1:11 – Resa Kelly’s journey into chemistry education research
    • 2:20 – How visualizations and animations help students learn chemistry
    • 3:31 – Why this conversation is about more than just AI
    • 5:50 – Technology already shaping chemistry classrooms
    • 7:20 – Staying curious even if you’re skeptical of new technology
    • 9:10 – Time constraints and practical barriers for teachers
    • 10:00 – Creative ways educators are using AI
    • 14:15 – Teaching students to evaluate trustworthy information
    • 17:13 – The central question: What should students be able to do in a technology-rich environment?
    • 18:20 – Is technology helping students learn or just complete tasks?
    • 19:00 – If AI gives answers, what are we really teaching?
    • 24:00 – Why these conversations matter beyond BCCE
    • 28:15 – Assumptions, AI, and trusting students
    • 30:05 – Final thoughts and invitation to the conference conversation
    Support this podcast on Patreon

    Buy Podcast Merch and Apparel

    Check out our website at chemforyourlife.com

    Watch our episodes on YouTube

    Find us on Instagram, Twitter, and Facebook @ChemForYourLife


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    33 mins
  • How realistic are crime shows about forensics? (with Nicki Stewart)
    Jun 11 2026

    CSI makes forensic science look fast, easy, and almost magical. But how much of that is actually true?This week we’re joined by forensic chemist and graduate student Nicki Stewart to answer your questions about forensic science. We talk about crime shows, fingerprints, toxicology, illicit drugs, and what really happens inside a forensic laboratory. Plus, Nicki shares what surprised her most when she worked in a real crime lab and why forensic science is often much slower (and more complicated) than TV would have you believe.

    Support this podcast on Patreon Buy Podcast Merch and Apparel

    Check out our website at chemforyourlife.com

    Watch our episodes on YouTube

    Find us on Instagram, Twitter, and Facebook @ChemForYourLife

    Time Stamps

    • 0:00 – Do crime shows get forensics right?
    • 1:20 – Nicki’s background in forensic chemistry and toxicology
    • 6:15 – From forensic chemistry to chemistry education
    • 9:10 – The “CSI Effect” and common TV misconceptions
    • 12:30 – Breaking Bad, Project Hail Mary, and science accuracy in entertainment
    • 14:10 – Transitioning from clinical chemistry to forensic chemistry
    • 17:40 – The biggest misconceptions about forensic work
    • 20:20 – Forensic chemistry vs. forensic biology
    • 22:05 – How fingerprints actually form
    • 26:35 – Can fingerprints be removed?
    • 26:55 – How forensic labs identify illicit drugs
    • 31:10 – Which shows portray science most accurately?
    • 33:00 – What’s coming in our next forensic chemistry episode
    Support this podcast on Patreon Buy Podcast Merch and Apparel

    Check out our website at chemforyourlife.com

    Watch our episodes on YouTube

    Find us on Instagram, Twitter, and Facebook @ChemForYourLife

    References from the Episode:

    Thanks to our monthly supporters
    Sara Hull
    Dog Day Dan
    Bri .
    Summer Alden
    Amanda Raymond
    Kyle McCray
    Justine
    Ash
    Vince W
    Julie S.
    Heather Ragusa
    Autoclave
    Dorien VD
    Scott Beyer
    Jessie Reder
    J0HNTR0Y
    Cullyn R
    Erica Bee
    Elizabeth P
    Rachel Reina
    Letila
    Katrina Barnum-Huckins
    Suzanne Phillips
    Venus Rebholz
    Jacob Taber
    Brian Kimball
    Kristina Gotfredsen
    Timothy Parker
    Steven Boyles
    Chris Skupien
    Chelsea B
    Avishai Barnoy
    Hunter Reardon

    Support this podcast on Patreon Buy Podcast Merch and Apparel

    Check out our website at chemforyourlife.com

    Watch our episodes on YouTube

    Find us on Instagram, Twitter, and Facebook @ChemForYourLife


    Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.

    Show More Show Less
    37 mins