<p>htt://<a href="http://www.sciencegeek.net/APchemistry/ti_progs/ti_programs.shtml">www.sciencegeek.net/APchemistry/ti_progs/ti_programs.shtml</a></p>
<p>I guess it's worth a try but this guy doesn't tell his students to enter straight text like solubility rules. He has them entering formulas to do math problems.</p>
<p>copy over the p after HTT, as the site blocks out information if u post a link.</p>
<p>I agree with mathwiz. I took General Chem at a CC, and the teacher specifically said we couldn't use a TI-83 (or any graphing calculator) because of the storage capabilities. However, your teacher didn't make that clear (the storage stuff, rather).</p>
<p>At worst, I think you have a gray area on your hands. I had a situation at the end of my junior year that had me panicked for awhile (I posted about it in the parents' forum in Aug/Sept). Basically, a classmate had looked at a (wrong) answer on my paper in the middle of a quiz and she just said the right answer without my asking for it. I wrote it down, thinking, "Well, if I had heard anyone use that word in the course of a clarification question to the teacher, I would have recognized it as correct anyway. If my classmate had said the wrong answer, I would have known it was incorrect and wouldn't have written it down." When I started working on college apps in the late summer, I saw the academic integrity questions, and I was like, "Gee, did I cheat?" (or violate the honor code?) I was sooooo worried. I talked to one teacher (from a different class), and she was like, "Weeellll...it's a gray area, but your intent was reasonable." At the end of the semester, I was chatting with the teacher of "that" class and brought up the situation in a casual, non-specific tone. "You didn't cheat...but your classmate did!" she said.</p>
<p>So that isn't totally related, but it's kind of like an issue with being unsure of the terms -- sort of a "better to ask in advance" situation, as I think someone else had pointed out. Good luck.</p>
<p>So, anything happen with this yet? I'm interested in knowing.</p>