Author of 'The Quick Guide to Classroom Management: 45 Secrets That All High School Teachers Need to Know' which is available at https://www.amazon.com/dp/1798536722/ Currently teaching IBDP and IGCSE Chemistry at an international school in Bangkok, Thailand. I'm originally from North Wales in the UK.
Author of 'The Quick Guide to Classroom Management: 45 Secrets That All High School Teachers Need to Know' which is available at https://www.amazon.com/dp/1798536722/ Currently teaching IBDP and IGCSE Chemistry at an international school in Bangkok, Thailand. I'm originally from North Wales in the UK.
This PowerPoint Presentation covers most of the requirements for the Covalent Bonding unit for Edexcel IGCSE Chemistry in a clear and coherent manner.
These slides may also be useful for other exam boards, such as AQA, WJEC, CIE, etc., if modified after download.
Specification statements covered include:
1.31 describe the formation of a covalent bond by the sharing of a pair of electrons between two atoms.
1.32 understand covalent bonding as a strong attraction between the bonding pair of electrons and the nuclei of the atoms involved in the bond.
1.33 explain, using dot and cross diagrams, the formation of covalent compounds by electron sharing for the following substances:
Hydrogen, chlorine, hydrogen chloride, water, methane, ammonia, oxygen, nitrogen, carbon dioxide, ethane, ethene.
1.34 recall that substances with simple molecular substances are gases or liquids, or solids with low melting points.
1.35 explain why substances with simple molecular structure have low melting points in terms of the relatively weak forces between the molecules.
1.36 explain the high melting points of substances with giant covalent structures in terms of the breaking of many strong covalent bonds.
This is the fifth chapter in my book, offering a comprehensive guide to using ICT in education.
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This guide will benefit you immensely as it describes:
1. How to use smart phones and tablets effectively in the classroom
2. How to make use of Google forms and ICT-based peer assessment - saving you time and energy!
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4. How to use social media in education
5. How to train students to adapt themselves to new technology
If you want to really revolutionize the way you teach, then this is the guide for you!
This is a brilliant, two-page ionic bonding worksheet that is suitable for GCSE, IGCSE and MYP students.
The worksheet comes with full solutions and has been hand-made and checked by me (I’m a high school chemistry teacher with 15 years of experience).
In the worksheet, students have to fill in the blanks, add electrons to shells and draw a full diagram.
This is an awesome crossword puzzle that would serve as an excellent starter, plenary or in-lesson activity for any periodic table and electron shells class. This crossword tests students’ knowledge of:
Order of filling of electrons
Position of elements in the periodic table
Electronic configurations of type 2,8,2 (s,p and d orbitals are not covered)
This is a lot of fun and my students loved it. The kids will literally have to hunt through a periodic table to find answers to clues such as:
This element has an electronic configuration of 2,7
This element has an electronic configuration of 2,8,5
The first three periods of the periodic table are tested.
In this pack you get a PPTX (which you can edit), a pdf version and a png of the puzzle itself (in case you want to project it on your interactive whiteboard for students to fill in).
This PowerPoint Presentation covers most of the requirements for the Acids, Alkalis and Titrations unit for Edexcel IGCSE Chemistry in a clear and coherent manner.
These slides may also be useful for other exam boards, such as AQA, WJEC, CIE, etc., if modified after download.
Specification statements covered include:
describe the use of the indicators litmus, phenolphthalein and methyl orange to distinguish between acidic and alkaline solutions
understand how the pH scale, from 0–14, can be used to classify solutions as strongly acidic, weakly acidic, neutral, weakly alkaline or strongly alkaline
describe the use of universal indicator to measure the approximate pH value of a solution
define acids as sources of hydrogen ions, H+, and alkalis as sources of hydroxide ions, OH¯
predict the products of reactions between dilute hydrochloric, nitric and sulfuric acids; and metals, metal oxides and metal carbonates (excluding the reactions between nitric acid and metals)
understand the general rules for predicting the solubility of salts in water:
i all common sodium, potassium and ammonium salts are soluble
ii all nitrates are soluble
iii common chlorides are soluble, except silver chloride
iv common sulfates are soluble, except those of barium and calcium
v common carbonates are insoluble, except those of sodium, potassium and ammonium
describe experiments to prepare soluble salts from acids
describe experiments to prepare insoluble salts using precipitation reactions
describe experiments to carry out acid-alkali titrations.
This fun and dynamic resource is perfect for IGCSE, GCSE and MYP Chemistry students. It covers all of the essential vocabulary of electrolysis including:
Anode
Cathode
Anion
Cation
Electrode
Electrolyte
REDCAT (Reduction at the cathode)
OILRIG (Oxidation is loss, reduction is gain)
PANCake (Positive Anode, Negative Cathode)
You can use this fun activity as a starter, plenary or 'breaker' within the lesson.
In this pack you get a pptx, pdf and a png file of the puzzle itself.
Suitable for Key Stage 3 onwards, these questions allow practice in the addition of fractions. Denominators are different, and answers can be given in mixed or classical form!
Brilliant as a starter or 'chunking' activity. Will keep students busy for a while.
This PowerPoint presentation goes through the basics of covalent bonding and is suitable for GCSE and IGCSE Level students. Covalent bonding is described as the sharing of electrons between non-metal atoms, and care is taken to deliver the material in a paced, step-by-step fashion. This PPT assumes some knowledge of ionic bonding, so if you haven’t covered that topic yet, then you might want to delete those slides after download.
Dot-and-cross diagrams are included: both with inner shells and simplified (only outer shells) formats - perfect for training students to be efficient in the exam.
Activities included (feel free to edit or modify after download):
Comparing bonding diagrams as a starter (spotting similarities and differences)
Main teaching content (beginning from first principles with simple atomic structure, leading into covalent bond formation)
Think map to compare ionic and covalent bonding (feel free to remove if needed)
Drawing dot-and-cross and stick diagrams as a plenary
***Learning outcomes are included, so this is a great ‘box ticker’ for an observation lesson. ***
Some syllabus references that this PPT satisfies (to name but a few):
AQA GCSE Chemistry:
**4.2.1.1 Chemical Trends:**Covalent bonding occurs in most non-metallic elements and in compounds of non-metals.
4.2.1.4 Covalent Bonding: When atoms share pairs of electrons, they form covalent bonds. These bonds between atoms are strong
4.2.1.4 Covalent Bonding: The covalent bonds in molecules and giant structures can be represented in the following forms (dot and cross and ball and stick examples given in the specification)
**Edexcel IGCSE Chemistry: **
1.44: Know that a covalent bond is formed between atoms by the sharing of a pair of electrons
1.45: Understand covalent bonds in terms of electrostatic attractions
1.46: Understand how to use dot-and-cross diagrams to represent covalent bonds
This PowerPoint Presentation covers most of the requirements for the Crude Oil and Alkanes units for Edexcel IGCSE Chemistry in a clear and coherent manner.
These slides may also be useful for other exam boards, such as AQA, WJEC, CIE, etc., if modified after download.
Specification statements covered include:
know that crude oil is a mixture of hydrocarbons
describe how the industrial process of fractional distillation separates crude oil
into fractions
know the names and uses of the main fractions obtained from crude oil: refinery gases, gasoline, kerosene, diesel, fuel oil and bitumen
know the trend in colour, boiling point and viscosity of the main fractions
know that a fuel is a substance that, when burned, releases heat energy
know the possible products of complete and incomplete combustion of hydrocarbons with oxygen in the air
know the general formula for alkanes
explain why alkanes are classified as saturated hydrocarbons
understand how to draw the structural and displayed formulae for alkanes with up to five carbon atoms in the molecule, and to name the unbranched-chain isomers
describe the reactions of alkanes with halogens in the presence of ultraviolet
radiation, limited to mono-substitution
This is the third chapter of my book: The Quick Guide to Classroom Management.
In this chapter, you will learn a series of effective secrets which are guaranteed to help you improve the behaviour of your students.
After teaching and tutoring thousands of chemistry students over the years, I've found that the topic of ions tends to cause tremendous confusion (and is generally poorly understood).This is one of those fundamental topics that must be understood properly if students are going to learn about balancing equations, stoichiometry and advanced level chemistry later in in school.
I created this resource booklet as a very clear way for students to understand the following:
• What the period and group numbers tell us about the structure of an atom
• What anions and cations are
• How to use the group number of an element to figure out what kind of ion it will form
Complete with full colour images, activities and answers; this booklet finally offers a clear and comprehensive explanation of this fundamental topic in chemistry. At the end there is also a link to a website, where students can take this topic to the next level and learn about ionic bonding and the formulae of ionic compounds.
I've set the price at 2 pounds because this resource took a lot of time to create, and is of a very high quality.
All images have no attribution (they have been self-created or obtained from www.pixabay.com)
This is a fun (and moderately challenging) crossword puzzle that would serve as an excellent starter, plenary or in-lesson activity for any class about elements, compounds and isotopes. This crossword tests students’ knowledge of:
1. The differences between elements and compounds in terms of physical structure, ease of separation and reactivity
2. Groups and periods in the periodic table, and how they relate to valence electron and shell number
3. The atomic definition of isotopes
This is a lot of fun and your kids will love it. If your students have never learnt anything about elements, compounds and isotopes before, then you could provide the students with a summary to help them as they do the puzzle.
In this pack you get a PPTX (which you can edit), a pdf version and a png of the puzzle itself (in case you want to project it on your interactive whiteboard for students to fill in).
This well-formatted worksheet is perfect for high-ability GCSE students and post-16 learners. It covers:
The definition of isotopes (in terms of neutrons, protons and electrons)
The uses of radioisotopes (along with examples for each use)
Symbols for radioisotopes
This sheet should keep your students busy for some time as they will need to do some research to find out the answers for each question. It also comes as a Word document, so is fully editable and easy to re-format if needs be.
This quick activity can be used as a starter, plenary or mid-lesson worksheet. Students have to fill in the boxes to show the stages in photosynthesis (and how they all link together). Students should be familiar with the following vocabulary:
Chloroplast
Chlorophyll
Grana
Stoma
A brilliant, well-illustrated, clear and varied worksheet that works well as starter, plenary or as a chunk of the main body of lesson.
Suitable for GCSE or IGCSE Chemistry, Science (Double Award) or Science (Single Award), this resource covers:
1. The differences between elements and compounds in terms of physical structure (represented by diagrams), ease of separation and reactivity
2. Groups and periods in the periodic table, and how they relate to valence electron and shell number
Comes complete with answers. Great for peer or self-assessment.
Included in this pack are both the word doc (which you can edit) and pdf versions.
This is the second chapter in my book: The Quick Guide to Classroom Management. This chapter covers:
1. The features present in all outstanding lessons
2. How to keep your students on-task through effective starter activities and games
3. How to make your students subtly aware of the learning outcomes, so that maximum memory retention takes place
4. How to enhance learning by using your physiology
This resource is guaranteed to help you make your lessons more stimulating
This is the first chapter in my book, 'The Quick Guide to Classroom Management'. This chapter covers the essential secrets to building effective rapport with your students. This is guaranteed to help you build positive relationships with all of the students you teach.
This ten word crossword puzzle is designed to review the key vocabulary found in the ionic bonding topic, and is suitable for GCSE and IGCSE Level students.
Clues and answers are as follows:
anion: A negative ion
cation: A positive ion
lost: Positive ions are formed when electrons are ____
gained: Negative ions are formed when electrons are ______
oppositely: An ionic bond is defined as the electrostatic force of attraction that exists between two ________ charged ions
metals: These usually form positive ions
nonmetals: These usually form negative ions
chloride: This is the name of the negative ion found in table salt
lattice: Many ions join together to form a large _______ structure
soluble: Ionic compounds are usually _______ in water
This PowerPoint presentation goes through the basics of ion formation and is suitable for GCSE and IGCSE Level students. Metals are clearly shown to lose electrons, whereas non-metals are clearly shown to gain electrons. Key words such as ‘anion’ and ‘cation’ are included, and electron shell/‘dot and cross’ diagrams with sqaure brackets are given (i.e. in the same format as required by the exam).
Activities included (feel free to edit or modify after download):
Whiteboard.fi starter
Main teaching content (beginning from first principles with simple atomic structure, leading into ion formation)
Google Doc suggested plenary (feel free to copy the slide into a Google Doc. or print for students to fill in)
Some syllabus references that this PPT satisfies (to name but a few):
AQA GCSE Chemistry:
4.2.1.1 Chemical Trends:* Ionic bonding occurs in compounds formed from metals combined with non-metals.*
4.2.1.2 Ionic Bonding: Students should be able to draw dot and cross diagrams for ionic compounds formed by metals in Groups 1 and 2 with non-metals in Groups 6 and 7.
**Edexcel IGCSE Chemistry: **
1.37: Understand how ions are formed by electron loss or gain
1.40: Draw dot-and-cross diagrams to show the formation of ionic compounds by electron transfer, limited to combinations of elements from Groups 1, 2, 3 and 5, 6, 7