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Indian American UCLA Professor Neil Garg Launches Online Tutorials in Organic Chemistry

UCLA’s Professor of the Year, Indian American, Neil Garg has revolutionized the way students view and study organic chemistry in California.

Garg has been extremely successful in getting UCLA students to love his new way of fun tutorials.

Garg’s new system termed ‘BACON’ (Biology And Chemistry Online Notes) is a set of fun and engaging online tutorials that make connections between organic chemistry and topics as sports, health, genetics and even popular television shows.

“The field of organic chemistry has made a tremendous mistake,” Garg said, “in not showing students and the general public its importance and why they should love it — or at the very least, appreciate it.”

“BACON makes organic chemistry less intimidating and really helps students learn chemical reactions and retain the knowledge … while keeping the stress level down, said Michael Bailey, Jr., a UCLA senior and pre-medicine major. “The BACON tutorials completely changed my view of organic chemistry. I laughed, I cried, I learned.”

“BACON makes organic chemistry relevant and important to students,” said Vandan Kasar, a recent UCLA graduate who formerly served as an undergraduate assistant to Garg. “BACON actually makes the material stick long-term because students have associated it with a process or product that they use in their everyday lives.”

Garg developed BACON with the assistance of graduate student Tejas Shah and several other UCLA students over the course of two years, and he continues to add new content.

The labor-intensive project has received more than $20,000 in financial support donated by individuals and pharmaceutical companies.

“I enjoy thinking about how to teach students the relevance of organic chemistry in an engaging way,” Garg said. “So many students don’t appreciate organic chemistry and the important impact it makes on our lives. It’s a teaching challenge to help change students’ perceptions about organic chemistry, and I welcome the challenge.

“Our students deserve the best education,” he said, adding, “Other students deserve that, too,” among them the more than 8,000 students who have used or are currently using BACON at more than 30 colleges and universities, including Duke University, UC Irvine, Cal State Long Beach, Emory University, University of Vermont, and universities in Italy, Japan and Switzerland.

College-level educators who are interested in the tutorials, which are designed for use as a supplement to undergraduate organic chemistry courses, are invited to visit the BACON website.
AP and honors high school chemistry teachers are also welcome to sign up, but BACON might be too advanced for their students, said Garg, who added that he’s considering adding tutorials for them.

BACON is just one of Garg’s many innovative approaches to teaching. Especially popular among his students is an extra-credit project in which they produce music videos about organic chemistry and an assignment in which honors students produce videos about careers that incorporate organic chemistry. Currently, Garg is working with colleagues Lucas Morrill and Jacquelin Kammeyer to revamp UCLA’s organic chemistry laboratories for chemistry majors and develop a new curriculum that is challenging, relevant and fun.

Garg is the recipient of many honors, including a 2016 Guggenheim Fellowship, the 2015 Gold Shield Faculty Prize, UCLA’s prestigious 2014 Eby Award for the Art of Teaching and UCLA’s 2012-2013 BruinWalk.com’s Professor of the Year.

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