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Exploring Chemical Change

Science • Year 9 • 60 • 30 students • Created with AI following Aligned with National Curriculum for England

Science
9Year 9
60
30 students
26 March 2025

Teaching Instructions

This is lesson 1 of 7 in the unit "Chemical Reactions Unleashed". Lesson Title: Introduction to Chemical Reactions Lesson Description: Students will explore the basic concepts of chemical reactions, including reactants, products, and the law of conservation of mass. They will engage in a discussion about everyday examples of chemical reactions.

Exploring Chemical Change

Lesson Overview

Unit: Chemical Reactions Unleashed
Lesson: 1 of 7
Year Level: Year 9
Curriculum Area: Science – Material World
Achievement Objectives:

  • Understand that chemical reactions involve reactants changing into products.
  • Observe and describe evidence of chemical change (e.g., colour change, gas formation, temperature change).
  • Recognise the Law of Conservation of Mass in simple reactions.

Preparation & Differentiation for Dyslexic Students

  • Visual Aids: Use large, clear font (Arial or Verdana) and coloured backgrounds (light blue or cream) for reading materials.
  • Hands-on Learning: More time for practical work and observation rather than extensive reading or writing.
  • Step-by-Step Instructions: Break down tasks into clear, simple steps and repeat instructions verbally.
  • Collaborative Learning: Pair dyslexic students with peers who can assist with note-taking.
  • Minimal Writing: Use drawing, oral discussions, and sentence starters instead of heavy writing requirements.

Lesson Structure (60 Minutes)

1. Engagement – "What’s Changing?" (10 minutes)

Activity: Fast Fire Brainstorm

  • Write on the board:
    • What happens when you light a candle?
    • Why does an apple go brown when cut?
    • What happens when you cook an egg?
  • Ask students to discuss in pairs and write ideas on whiteboards or sticky notes.
  • Gather responses and group them into "Physical Changes" and "Chemical Changes."
  • Dyslexic-Friendly Tip: Use icons (🔥 = heat reaction, 💨 = gas released) instead of text-heavy descriptions.

2. Explanation – Defining Chemical Reactions (15 minutes)

Key Teaching Points (Presented Visually & Verbally)

  • A chemical reaction happens when substances change into something new.
  • Reactants → change into → Products.
  • Evidence of a Chemical Reaction:
    • Colour change 🟠🟡
    • Bubbles (Gas forming) 💨
    • Heat or temperature change ♨️
    • Precipitate (solid forms in a liquid) 🧪
  • Introduce the Law of Conservation of Mass (mass stays the same before and after reaction).

Short Practical Demo: Vinegar & Baking Soda Reaction 🧪

  • Pour baking soda into a beaker and add vinegar.
  • Ask students: What do they see? What did it form? Why is this a chemical change?
  • Write words vs. Draw it – let dyslexic students use simple symbols to record observations (bubbles = gas, thermometer icon for temperature change).

3. Exploration – Hands-on Reaction Stations (20 minutes)

Students Rotate Through 3 Simple Reaction Stations:

(Table groups of 5, every 5 minutes a group shifts)

  1. Steel Wool & Vinegar (Rusting) – Observe colour change over time.
  2. Dissolving Sugar vs. Burning Sugar – Compare a physical change (mixing into water) vs. a chemical reaction (caramelising).
  3. Lemon Juice & Baking Soda – Notice bubbling = gas production.

✏️ Worksheet (Visual Options Available):

  • Students describe reactions using provided answer starters and diagrams instead of full sentences.
  • For Dyslexic Learners: Allow voice-recorded observations or simple drawing entries instead of writing.

4. Reflection – Summarising Findings (10 minutes)

Exit Activity: "What Stuck With You?"

  • Students complete one of the options:
    1. Draw a picture of one reaction they observed.
    2. Finish this sentence: "A chemical reaction is when..."
    3. Explain out loud what surprised them in today’s lesson.

Homework/Extension:

  • Ask students to look for a chemical reaction at home and describe it tomorrow.

Assessment & Teacher Reflection Notes:

  • Did students correctly observe chemical reactions?
  • Were dyslexic students able to engage with minimal writing demands?
  • Which concepts needed more clarification for next lesson?

Next Lesson Preview: "Reactions in the Real World"

  • Applying today’s learning to explosions, digestion, and rusting.
  • Understanding reaction rates and why some reactions are fast or slow.

TEACHER WOW FACTOR: This lesson gets students thinking before they learn definitions and minimises reading/writing, making it accessible for all learners in a Kiwi classroom.

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