Chiral Education
Definition: The structured teaching and learning of chirality and stereochemistry, from fundamental spatial concepts to advanced applications in synthesis, biology, and medicine.
Context: Chiral education spans undergraduate instruction, professional training, and continuing education. Modern chiral education emphasizes three-dimensional thinking, molecular visualization, biological relevance, and translational impact, particularly in medicinal chemistry and pharmaceutical sciences.
Example: Teaching stereochemistry using molecular models and real drug case studies (e.g., thalidomide, ibuprofen, citalopram) rather than only abstract projections.
Related Terms: Chiral Literacy; Stereochemistry; Medicinal Chemistry; Stereo-pharmacology, Chiral Pharmacology
Reference: Holme, T. A. Assessing conceptual understanding in stereochemistry. Journal of Chemical Education, 96, 401-410 (2019); Nicoll, G. Investigating student misconceptions in organic chemistry: Stereochemistry and representations. Journal of Chemical Education, 78, 623-627 (2001); Clement, J., & Ainsworth, S. Multiple visual representations in chemistry learning. Topics in Cognitive Science, 10, 857-874 (2018); Underwood, S. M., et al. Expert-novice differences in interpreting stereochemical representations. Journal of Chemical Education, 93, 2014-2021 (2016).