T h e I n d e p e n d e n t O n l i n e Ho m e w o r k S o l u tio n Atkins and Jones • Atkins and dePaula • Bauer, Birk and Marks • Blei and Odian • Brady and Senese • Brown, LeMay and Bursten • Bruice • Burdge • Carey and Guiliano • Chang • Corwin • Daub and Seese • Denniston, Topping, and Caret • Ebbing and Gammon • Gilbert, Kirss, and Davies • Goldberg • Guinn and Brewer • Harris • Hill and Kolb • Hill and Petrucci • Jenkins • Jones and Atkins • Jones and Fleming • Kelter, Mosher, and Scott • Kotz and Treichel • Laird •McMurry • McMurry and Fay • McMurry, Castellion, Ballantine • Moore, Stanitski, Jurs • Olmsted and Williams • Petrucci, Harwood, Herring, and Madura • Raymond • Russo and Silver • Sandberg • Shultz • Silberberg • Smith •Solomons and Fryhle • Stoker • Suchocki • Timberlake• Tro • Vollhardt and Schore • Wade • Waldron • Wertz • Whitten, Davis and Peck • Wilbraham, Staley, Matta, and Waterman • Zumdahl • Zumdahl and Zumdahl • Atkins and Jones • Atkins and dePaula • Bauer, Birk and Marks • Blei and Odian • Brady and Senese • Brown, LeMay and Bursten • Bruice • Burdge • Carey and Guiliano • Chang • Corwin • Daub and Seese • Denniston, Topping, and Caret • Ebbing and Gammon • Gilbert, Kirss, and Davies • Goldberg • Guinn and Brewer • Harris • Hill and Kolb • Hill and Petrucci • Jenkins • Jones and Atkins • Jones and Fleming • Kelter, Mosher, and Scott • Kotz and Treichel • Laird •McMurry • McMurry and Fay • McMurry, Castellion, Ballantine • Moore, Stanitski, Jurs • Olmsted and Williams • Petrucci, Harwood, Herring, and Madura • Raymond • Russo and Silver • Sandberg • Shultz • Silberberg • Smith •Solomons and Fryhle • Stoker • Suchocki • Timberlake• Tro • Vollhardt and Schore • Wade • Waldron • Wertz • Whitten, Davis and Peck • Wilbraham, Staley, Matta, and Waterman • Zumdahl • Zumdahl and Zumdahl • Atkins and Jones • Atkins and dePaula • Bauer, Birk and Marks • Blei and Odian • Brady and Senese • Brown, LeMay and Bursten • Bruice • Burdge • Carey and Guiliano • Chang • Corwin • Daub and Seese • Denniston, Topping, and Caret • Ebbing and Gammon • Gilbert, Kirss, and Davies • Goldberg • Guinn and Brewer • Harris • Hill and Kolb • Hill and Petrucci • Jenkins • Jones and Atkins • Jones and Fleming • Kelter, Mosher, and Scott • Kotz and Treichel • Laird •McMurry • McMurry and Fay • McMurry, Castellion, Ballantine • Moore, Stanitski, Jurs • Olmsted and Williams • Petrucci, Harwood, Herring, and Madura • Raymond • Russo and Silver • Sandberg • Shultz • Silberberg •Silberberg • Smith •Solomons and Fryhle • Stoker • Suchocki • Timberlake• Tro • Vollhardt and Schore • Wade • Waldron • Wertz • Whitten, Davis and Peck • Wilbraham, Staley, Matta, and Waterman • Zumdahl • Zumdahl and Zumdahl • Atkins and Jones • Atkins and dePaula • Bauer, Birk and Marks • Blei and Odian • Brady and Senese • Brown, LeMay and Bursten • Bruice • Burdge • Carey and Guiliano • Chang • Corwin • Daub and Seese • Denniston, Topping, I’ve used other electronic homework systems, both web-based & and Caret • Ebbing and Gammon • Gilbert, Kirss, and Davies • Goldberg non web-based. WebAssign is by far the most flexible system I’ve • Guinn and Brewer • Harris • Hill and Kolb • Hill and Petrucci Jenkins satisfied • tried. I am• especially with the wide variety of question how Jones and Atkins • Jones and Fleming • Kelter, Mosher,types, and and Scott • easy Kotzit is to incorporate a range of difficulty levels in the assignments. I will definitely keep using WebAssign. and Treichel • Laird •McMurry • McMurry and Fay • McMurry, Castellion, —Brian Gilbert, Linfield College Ballantine • Moore, Stanitski, Jurs • Olmsted and Williams • Petrucci, Harwood, Herring, and Madura • Raymond • Russo and Silver • Sandberg • Shultz • Silberberg •Silberberg • Smith •Solomons and Fryhle • Stoker • Suchocki • Timberlake• Tro • Vollhardt and Schore • Wade • Waldron • Wertz • Whitten, Davis and Peck • Wilbraham, Staley, Matta, and Waterman www.webassign.net/chemistry • Zumdahl • Zumdahl and Zumdahl New Tools. New Functionality. New Textbooks. New Reasons to Adopt WebAssign in Chemistry. “ ” More Publishers. More Textbooks. More Editions. More Reasons to Adopt WebAssign. Regardless of the textbook you choose to adopt, you can use WebAssign to manage your online homework needs. Why? Because as an independent online homework provider, we support most textbooks from every publisher across the chemistry curriculum. It’s the one thing that all publishers can agree on—when it comes to online homework for chemistry, WebAssign works. The following textbooks are just some of those that WebAssign supports with text-specific problems including randomized values and algorithmic answers. Question counts and additional student support resources vary by title. Some publishers offer advanced support for specific titles, which may include complete eBooks and a wealth of interactive tools and resources, all at an affordable student price. Non-Majors Chemistry • • • • Hill and Kolb, Chemistry for Changing Times Suchocki, Conceptual Chemistry Tro, Chemistry in Focus Waldron, The Chemistry of Everything Preparatory/Basic Chemistry • • • • • • • • • • Bauer, Birk and Marks, A Conceptual Introduction to Chemistry Bauer, Birk and Marks, Introduction to Chemistry Corwin, Introductory Chemistry Daub and Seese, Basic Chemistry Goldberg, Fundamentals of Chemistry Russo and Silver, Introductory Chemistry Stoker, Introduction to Chemical Principles Timberlake, Basic Chemistry Tro, Introductory Chemistry Zumdahl, Introductory Chemistry General Chemistry • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Atkins and Jones, Chemical Principles Brady and Senese, Chemistry: The Study of Matter and Its Changes Brown, LeMay and Bursten, Chemistry: The Central Science Burdge, Chemistry Chang, Chemistry Chang, General Chemistry: The Essential Concepts Ebbing and Gammon, General Chemistry Gilbert, Kirss, and Davies, Chemistry: the Science in Context Hill and Petrucci, General Chemistry Jones and Atkins, Chemistry: Molecules, Matter and Change Kelter, Mosher, and Scott, Chemistry: The Practical Science Kotz and Treichel, Chemistry and Chemical Reactivity Laird, University Chemistry McMurry and Fay, Chemistry Moore, Stanitski, Jurs, Chemistry: The Molecular Science Olmsted and Williams, Chemistry Petrucci, Harwood, Herring, and Madura, General Chemistry: Principles and Modern Applications Shultz, Chemistry for Engineers Silberberg, Chemistry: Molecular Nature of Matter and Change Silberberg, Principles of General Chemistry Tro, Chemistry: A Molecular Approach Wertz, Chemistry: A Quantitative Science Whitten, Davis and Peck, General Chemistry Wilbraham, Staley, Matta, and Waterman, Chemistry Zumdahl, Chemical Principles Zumdahl and Zumdahl, Chemistry “ One of the features that attracts us the most to WebAssign is the variety of textbooks that are encoded within their system . . . by choosing WebAssign, we are able to select textbooks from virtually any publisher. —John Hopkins, Penn State University ” General, Organic and Biochemistry • • • • • • • • Blei and Odian, General, Organic and Biochemistry Denniston, Topping, and Caret, General, Organic and Biochemistry Guinn and Brewer, Essentials of General, Organic and Biochemistry McMurry, Castellion, Ballantine, Fundamentals of General, Organic and Biochemistry Raymond, General, Organic and Biological Chemistry Stoker, General, Organic and Biological Chemistry Timberlake, Chemistry: An Introduction to General, Organic and Biological Chemistry Timberlake, Chemistry: Structures of Life Organic Chemistry Since most organic chemistry textbooks include detailed solutions to end-of-chapter questions, Organic Chemistry titles in WebAssign include a collection of independent questions developed and extensively class-tested by Kay Sandberg, North Carolina State University that have been closely correlated to match the contents of the following texts: • Brown and Foote, Organic Chemistry • Bruice, Organic Chemistry • Carey and Guiliano, Organic Chemistry • Hornback, Organic Chemistry • Jenkins, Workbook for Organic Chemistry (Stand-Alone Question Collection) • Jones and Fleming, Organic Chemistry • McMurry, Organic Chemistry • Sandberg, Organic Chemistry (Stand-Alone Question Collection) • Smith, Organic Chemistry • Solomons and Fryhle, Organic Chemistry • Vollhardt and Schore, Organic Chemistry • Wade, Organic Chemistry Physical Chemistry • Atkins and dePaula, Physical Chemistry Quantitative Analysis • Harris, Quantitative Chemical Analysis For a complete listing of all supported textbooks, and live demos of each, visit: www.webassign.net/chemistry New Tools for Students. New Functionality for Faculty. A Whole New WebAssign for Chemistry. When you adopt WebAssign, you’re adopting more than a homework service with text-specific questions. You’re adopting a complete online solution for homework and assessment. Since our launch in 1997 in several large courses at North Carolina State University, WebAssign has continued to grow and innovate. Today, WebAssign partners with all major textbook publishers, offering customizable precoded questions from over 140 leading chemistry textbooks along with easy-to-use tools that allow instructors to create their own questions. We’ve introduced more powerful tools for faculty, including secure testing and complete assignment customization. With over three million student users at more than 5,000 institutions to date, WebAssign has been a trendsetter in online homework for over a decade. And now WebAssign introduces two new powerful tools to help chemistry students make the most of their WebAssign experience. chemPad MarvinSketch With our new chemPad answer palette, students can enter chemical formulas and equations naturally. With over 150 lines of intelligent feedback, chemPad is more than an answer-entry tool, it’s a tool that strengthens problem-solving skills and reinforces conceptual understanding. You can’t learn chemistry without learning about structures. WebAssign has integrated the latest version of the popular and powerful MarvinSketch application to automatically assess student-drawn structures, including skeletal structures, Lewis structures, reaction mechanisms with electron-flow arrows (“pushing electrons”), isotopically labeled reactions, and multi-step syntheses. Try WebAssign today! www.webassign.net/chemistry 1730 Varsity Drive, Suite 200 Raleigh, NC 27606-5228 (800) 955-8275 WebAssign® is a registered service mark of North Carolina State University under license to Advanced Instructional Systems, Inc. ©1997–2003 by North Carolina State University. Portions ©2003–2010 by Advanced Instructional Systems, Inc. Various trademarks by their respective owners.