After working with countless organic chemistry undergrads, I've noticed that many people come in to organic with a very poor background in drawing lewis structures. Often students think their skills are adequate, but they still lack the ability to consistently assign formal charge and draw structures in a fluid manner required to proceed with the course.
Practically all general chemistry text books teach a laborious method for drawing Lewis Structures where all of the valence electrons are counted, with a series of following steps we all know and love (sarcasm). Formal charge is treated as an after thought, and often neglected entirely. Does any chemist actually follow this method?
I would prefer to teach drawing lewis structures with an emphasis on formal charge, where a student knows that the structure is complete because the formal charges add up to the total real charge. Common bonding patterns would be emphasized (for example oxygen makes 2 bonds when neutral). I would also like to emphasize trends in formal charge, for example how replacing a bond with a lone pair causes the formal charge to be more negative.
Is this crazy? Anyone have any experience teaching it this way in general chemistry? The common way that structure drawing is taught in gen chem feels terribly wrong to me.