- Joined
- Nov 12, 2009
- Messages
- 4,826
- Reaction score
- 2,714
What makes organic chemistry the benchmark?
Benchmark in what sense?
It just follows the natural progression. I lot of people get weeded out at the start (bio1, genchem1, etc) then more people get weeded out via the respective course continuations.
...Then [for most students] they take on organic 1 and 2 and, consequently, more people get weeded out.
That is just the progression; that is how it works in most cases.
The student that says "but wait, why is ochem a weed-out class and not bio?" is missing the point on two fronts:
A) Bio is, in fact, also a weed-out course (any class that renders even a single student to say "eff this, I quit" is by definition weeding out).
B) I have never heard of a student successfully completing the entire genchem/ochem sequence (read: A or B) and then afterwards slam to a halt and fail Bio1 (read: F). If this happens, it is obviously an outlier.