It:intro-2011

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Chemical Information Technology 2011-2012

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A series of lecture demonstrations and workshops by Andrew McKinley [email a.mckinley]
Room 841, Chemistry Department, Imperial College London


Course Overview

The CIT course is designed to give you an introduction to using information services in your pursuit of your studies and to give you grounding in the tools used by the chemistry sector at large.

New services are being implemented all the time, and new features added to existing services; these pages are to serve as a guide to services, and the Wiki format allows anyone (with an IC login) to edit and update - this allows you to update the pages if you spot a mistake or become aware of a useful resource to share with others. Please do feel free to log in and annotate the pages if you see areas for improvement (though be aware that this cannot be done anonymously!)

As of July 2011 there were:

  • 54,041,136 organic and inorganic molecules and substances
  • 62,979,883 biological sequences
  • undertaking 49,206,442 described reactions
  • for which there are >2 billion reported experimental properties
  • described in >1 million scientific articles, 250,000 patents and 4,500 books published each year across 10,000 chemistry journals and databases.

Finding information is less like finding a "needle in a haystack"; more like finding a *specific piece of hay* across 100 haystacks!

Structure of the course

  • IT for lecture courses, tutorials and set projects
    • Managing your computer desktop and location
    • Accessing lecture notes and submission of assignments
    • Bibliographic searches and accessing scientific journals
    • Using software for preparation of reports and assignments
  • IT for laboratories and reports
    • MSDS Safety sheets
    • Property based searches
    • Using ChemDraw (and others) for 2D structure based searches
    • 3D Structure-based searches and Molecular Biology
  • Workshop slots

You will be allocated one of four groups (A1, A2, B1 and B2). Workshops take place on Monday and Thursdays with two 3hr sessions per student.

    • Group A1: Thursdays 13th October and 3rd November 2011, 14:00-17:00
    • Group A2: Thursdays 17th October and 17th November 2011, 14:00-17:00
    • Group B1: Mondays 10th and 31st October 2011, 14:00-17:00
    • Group B2: Mondays 17th October and 14th November 2011, 14:00-17:00

During these hours the computer suite is reserved for your group and demonstrators will be available to answer your questions in the class. Please do feel free to work on this course outside of these hours - students doing course and study work always have priority over students using the computers for non-chemistry related uses.

  • Lab Coursework

You are encouraged to work through the examples in this course at your own pace, and you should not feel that everything must be completed in the scheduled sessions.
There is one assignment provided for this course, and details may be found <here>. There is no 'start time' for this, but you must submit your assignment by your submission deadline as detailed below:

    • Group A1: Thursday 17th November 2011, 12noon
    • Group A2: Thursday 1st December 2011, 12noon
    • Group B1: Monday 14th November 2011, 12noon
    • Group B2: Mondays 28th November 2011, 12noon

Deadlines are two weeks after your second workshop session at midday, 12noon. This is so that the deadlines for A1 and B1 do not interfere with the second workshop sessions of A2 and B2.