benzyme wrote:been there.
also been in the lab a lot..because that's where skills are really honed.
you can be a bookworm with a 4.0, but have bearpaws with a pipette, and your assaying skills will be worthless. companies aren't going to care what books you've read, they want to know what you can do for them.
Sure me to...but book learning is what makes it possible.
One can certainly do organic synthesis without theory...I had a summer intern at the FDA while still in undergrad. I did some synthesis...but I didn't understand it. I was little more the a cook following a recipe at the time...this was pre sophomore organic mind you.
In fact I'd say that organic chemistry is equal parts book and lab...if you want to be good. I mean just keeping up with all the named reactions...then you need to keep abreast of the journal articles of those working close to you in the field.
Yeah there is no way you can deny the importance of book learning when it comes to chemistry...there is just WAY to much theory that is very important.
...unless of course all you are doing is peptide couplings...then sure you don't need much book learning at all.
But the first time you try a total synthesis of a natural product like say Taxol..LOL. Well no doubt you will need a lot of theory and knowledge to even begin to approach a retro synthesis of pretty much any natural product that has more than 1 chiral center.
So to the parent poster. My advise is this. Study your ass off to learn as much theory as you can. Then start exploring the world of chemistry. Do some extractions...get a good handle no acid/base pKa/pKb etc. What you learn here will pretty much apply across the board to synthesis. Eventually though you just got get into the kitchen and do some cooking.

If you really want to pursue chemistry there is no way around it. Go to grad school...make sure you pick someone that is very good at what they do and can teach you. Then you will spend 4-6 years in the lab diving very deep into the world of organic synthesis. Personally I'd recommend a Med Chem program for the simpel fact that you get to do organic chemistry with a purpose.
Peace.
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