Required GCSE Chemistry Practical, Making soluble Copper Sulfate from insoluble base Copper Oxide.
These resources have been successfully used with key stage four classes.
Fun Space Lesson. Maths Skills.
Calculate diameter of larger stars. (by the way, all the maths in these tasks has been simlpfied and approximated so the calculations are doable without a calculator for most abilities, even key stage 3.
Identify stars from description of relative size and colour using printed pictures.
In our solar system, calculate distance of each planet from centre (from our sun), by comparing each planet to relative distance compared to earths distance from sun.
Theoretically, identify which planets would be engulfed if these larger stars replaced our sun at centre of our solar system. (diametres of stars must be halved to find star radius).
Again theoretically, identify moments in human history and estimate year they occured, and roughly caluclate how many years ago these events were in past. Match these historic events to the time it has taken for light we NOW SEE to travel to us from distance stars (using rough data of ‘light years’ distance stars are away). Looking at stars is like ‘looking at the past’.
This is a double lesson resource.
Lesson 1 : practise balancing equations. Slides have been proven to help key stage 4 pupils with this skill.
Lesson 2: introduction to conservation of mass and loss of gas mass product. Practical with decomposition of Copper Carbonate.
This lesson has been used on several key stage 3 classes.
There is a card game which I made. It is mixed up. Pupils can do the cutting and sticking to match up the substances to the picture.
Here are two versions of powerpoints for lessons on Concentration.
The examples will introduce pupils to calculating concentrations in both grams per Litre and Moles per Litre (litre same as 1000cm3, 1000ml, or 1dm3, exam spec prefers 1dm3, good practise for A Level KS5)
These resources were successfully used to guide key stage 3 pupils through the practical ‘testing for starch’. Bunsen burners were used to heat the water.
This is a worksheet to help scaffold the skill of constructing correct ratios of atoms in formula, based on using group number from periodic table. It also includes a role play of a ‘real chemical plant reactor’ to increase interest.
This presentation covers main reactions of group 1 metals, with tasks in the slides.
It also prepares class for practical, flame tests.
It then provides a fun way to remember the colours of Li, Na and K. You must play SMOKE ON THE WATER from your computer…
Have fun