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Reddit mentions of Pushing Electrons: A Guide for Students of Organic Chemistry, 3rd

Sentiment score: 4
Reddit mentions: 7

We found 7 Reddit mentions of Pushing Electrons: A Guide for Students of Organic Chemistry, 3rd. Here are the top ones.

Pushing Electrons: A Guide for Students of Organic Chemistry, 3rd
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Found 7 comments on Pushing Electrons: A Guide for Students of Organic Chemistry, 3rd:

u/[deleted] · 3 pointsr/chemistry

Highly recommend this workbook: http://www.amazon.com/Pushing-Electrons-Students-Organic-Chemistry/dp/0030206936

I started going through it a little before class started (it was actually one of the required texts). Get your head around drawing structures and working mechanisms, and you'll be in great shape.

u/Ducky9202 · 2 pointsr/UniversityofReddit

Strongly suggest this study guide Honestly this really helped me get through my year of O Chem, especially the last quarter when I was starting to get rusty and needed a review for a comprehensive test.

u/earth23 · 2 pointsr/chemistry

Here is the best book for learning the basics of reaction mechanisms: Pushing Electrons

u/_perpetual_student_ · 1 pointr/chemistry

I just finished second semester O-Chem and my prof told me that I was one of her top students and that she expects me to ask her for a grad school letter. The key thing to Organic as a class is to keep up with the work. Don't procrastinate at all if you can help it. It is really the sort of course where you would not go wrong putting at least an hour a day of work in every single day whether that work be reading the chapter, doing problems, or doing a study group with friends.

So the real answer is consistently work on the material more or less all the time.

It really is not the hardest class I've ever taken nor the most deeply involved. It is a survey course with all the weaknesses that implies. There will be places where you would love to go into more depth, but can't because there is not enough time. It's simply a lot of information that you have to internalize in a small amount of time, not some fantastically difficult concepts that you have to break apart and derive every aspect of to see how people arrived at it.

Things that I have found helpful as review material and just being able to use an alternate source for the same stuff that is in the Solomons book?

u/2adn · 1 pointr/chemhelp

For grad school in pharmacology, you really don't need MO theory. In med chem, only if you are doing theoretical calculations. Klein's organic text or his books mentioned u/rightbackatcha/ are good with arrow-pushing, as is Week's book on the subject. https://www.amazon.com/Pushing-Electrons-Students-Organic-Chemistry/dp/0030206936