Lesson plans

RSC Education Coordinators

Determining the structure of compounds | 16–18 years

Examine data relating to the structure and complexity of compounds, including mass, infrared and 1 H NMR spectra

How do scientists grow protein crystals? | 14-16 years

Discover the methods and conditions used by chemical scientists to grow protein crystals in this lesson plan with activities for 14–16 year olds.

How was the first artificial dye made? | 16-18 years

Explore organic synthesis and the making of the first artificial dye, mauve, in a lesson plan and directed activity related to text (DART) for 16–18 year olds.

How does sodium react with chlorine? | 14-16 years

Investigate the reaction of sodium with chlorine, using students’ understanding of atoms, ions and lattice structure, in this lesson plan for 14–16 year olds.

Alternative fuels and low-carbon technology in cars | 16-18 years

Explore how cars can be fuelled using low-carbon technology, including hydrogen and hybrid power, in this lesson plan with activities for 16–18 year olds.

Introducing particle models | 11-14 years

Explore and interpret representations of particles, including three-dimensional models, using this lesson plan with activities for 11–14 year olds.

Reacting iron and sulfur to explore compounds | 11-14 years

Investigate the reaction between iron and sulfur and practise modelling chemical changes in this lesson plan with activities for 11–14 year olds.

Nucleophilic substitution reaction mechanisms | 16-18 years

Help your students explore the mechanism for an organic nucleophilic substitution reaction using this lesson plan with activities for 16–18 year olds.

Rules for naming hydrocarbons: alkanes to arenes | 16-18 years

Review the rules for naming hydrocarbon structures, including alkanes, alkenes, alkynes and arenes, using this lesson plan with activities for 16–18 year olds.

Interpreting rate of reaction graphs | 14-16 years

Use this lesson plan for 14–16 year olds to practise interpreting rate of reaction graphs, revising factors such as concentration, temperature and surface area.

Atoms and atomic structure: a ‘similar and different’ activity | 16-18 years

Help students consolidate their ideas about atoms and atomic structure, working in pairs to identify key concepts, using this lesson plan for 16–18 year olds.

Reactions of acids with metals and carbonates | 11-14 years

Help your students unravel misconceptions about how acids react with metals and carbonates via this lesson plan with downloadable activities for ages 11–14.

Simple chemical reactions: how do candles work? | 11-14 years

Clarify the ideas of burning, melting and evaporating with your students and tackle some misconceptions about candles with this lesson plan for 11–14 year olds.

Linking structure, bonding and substance properties | 16-18 years

Check students’ understanding of how properties of substances depend on their structure and bonding using this lesson plan with activities for 16–18 year olds.

Atoms: size, scale and nanoscience | 14-16 years

Explore the scale and size of atoms and their relation to elements, introducing students to nanoscience in this lesson plan with activities for 14–16 year olds.

What causes the greenhouse effect? | 16-18 years

Reinforce your students’ understanding of the cause of the greenhouse effect using this lesson plan with a demonstration and activities for 16–18 year olds.

Plastics and polymers: their structure and properties | 16-18 years

Explore how the properties of polymers depend on their structure and different types of intermolecular bonds using this lesson plan for 16–18 year olds.

What is stuff made of? Matter, atoms and elements | 11-14 years

Introduce the properties and behaviour of atoms as the smallest parts of elements and a basic unit of matter using this lesson plan for 11–14 year olds.

Writing word equations and finding reaction patterns | 14-16 years

Try this lesson plan for 14–16 year olds to help your students identify patterns in chemical reactions and practise writing word equations to describe them.

Metallic bonding and the structure of iron | 14-16 years

Explore how the bonding in iron relates to its physical properties and address common misconceptions using this lesson plan with activities

How do car exhaust gases impact the environment? | 16-18 years

Explore the origin and environmental impact of pollutants in car exhaust emissions using peer-assessed writing in this lesson plan for 16–18 year olds.

Transition metal complexes and ligand exchange | 16-18 years

Try this lesson plan for 16–18 year olds to support your students to research transition metal complexes, including shape, naming, bonding and ligand exchange.

Enzymes: catalysis, specificity and stability | 16-18 years

Explore how enzymes work, including substrate specificity and the effects of heat and pH, using peer assessment in this lesson plan for 16–18 year olds.

Exploring precipitation reactions using diagrams | 14-16 years

Discover how ions are arranged in precipitation reactions and practise completing ionic equations using this lesson plan with activities for 14–16 year olds.

Catalysts, rates of reaction and what sank the Kursk | 14-16 years

Use the case of the Kursk submarine to devise an experimental investigation into catalysts’ effects on rate of reaction in this lesson plan for 14–16 year olds.

Investigating the chemistry of how fireworks work | 14-16 years

Explore the principles behind fireworks and what makes the different colours we see when they go off using this lesson plan with activities for 14–16 year olds.

How does burning magnesium affect its mass? | 11-14 years

Investigate what happens to the mass of magnesium when it burns and reacts with oxygen using this lesson plan and practical activity for 11–14 year olds.

Revising the periodic table using a concept map | 14-16 years

Use a concept map to help your students revise the periodic table and explain how elements are arranged in this lesson plan with activities for 14–16 year olds.

Molecules and the possibility of life in outer space | 14-16 years

Explore the molecules found in space as clues to the potential existence of extraterrestrial life, using this lesson plan with activities for 14–16 year olds.

How do alkali metals react with water? | 14-16 years

Explore how alkali metals react with water using a series of demonstrations and videos in this lesson plan with activities

Using a survey to learn what shampoos people use | 11-14 years

Collect and analyse data from surveys, exploring differences between subjective and objective data, using this lesson plan with activities for 11–14 year olds.

Conservation of mass in dissolving and precipitation | 11-14 years

Explore what happens during precipitation reactions and when substances dissolve using this lesson plan with downloadable activities for 11–14 year olds.

What is the rock cycle? | 11-14 years

Try this lesson plan and set of downloadable activities to help teach 11-14 year olds about sedimentary, metamorphic and igneous rocks and the rock cycle.

Why do sediments form layers? | 11-14 years

Explore the layered formation of sedimentary rocks using this lesson plan and set of downloadable activities for 11–14 year olds.

What happens when a substance changes state? | 11-14 years

Use this lesson plan for 11–14 year olds to explore what happens when substances warm, cool, boil or freeze, tackling misconceptions about changes of state.

What are the effects of acid rain? | 11-14 years

Try this lesson plan for 11–14 year olds to investigate the effects of acid rain on metals and carbonate rocks through field work and an experiment.

What happens to weathered pieces of rock? | 11-14 years

Investigate how rock fragments are transported and deposited by water currents using this lesson plan and downloadable activity for 11–14 year olds.

Particle models: gas, liquid, solid | 11-14 years

Help your students develop their understanding of gases, liquids and solids using the particle model in this lesson plan with activities for 11–14 year olds.

Investigating the composition of limestone | 11-14 years

Use this lesson plan for 11–14 year olds to help your students plan, implement and evaluate a practical investigation to determine if all limestone is the same.

Acids and alkalis: using concept maps | 11–16 years

Help your students consolidate their ideas about acids and alkalis using this lesson plan and set of downloadable activities

Measuring vitamin C in fruit using titration | 14-16 years

Compare the amount of vitamin C in fruit and juices using titration, and explore conditions affecting vitamin C levels, in this lesson plan for 14–16 year olds.

What are crystals and how are they structured? | 11-14 years

Discover the regular structure and arrangement of particles in crystalline substances using this lesson plan with activities for 11–14 year olds.

How do shampoos work? Hair care, acids and bases | 14-16 years

Test shampoos and investigate their ingredients as an application of acid–base chemistry using this lesson plan with practical activities for 14–16 year olds.

Understanding the structure of atoms | 14–16 years

Check your learners’ understanding of atomic structure using self assessment in this lesson plan with activities

What are hydrogen bonds? | 16-18 years

Help students explore hydrogen bonding and discover where hydrogen bonds are found using this lesson plan with activities for 16–18 year olds.

What are chemical reactions used for? | 11-14 years

Try this lesson plan for 11–14 year olds to explore how chemical reactions are used to produce energy, make new materials or support biological systems.

Do vitamin pills work? Exploring scientific evidence | 14-16 years

Analyse data about effects of vitamin C and explore how science can give rise to different viewpoints in this lesson plan with activities for 14–16 year olds.

‘Healthy’ fats, obesity and measuring unsaturation | 16-18 years

Measure the level of ‘saturation’ of fats and oils using iodine, exploring the relation to obesity, with this lesson plan and experiment for 16–18 year olds.

Group 2 elements: making mind maps | 16-18 years

Construct mind maps with your students to describe and compare the properties of group 2 elements and their compounds in this lesson plan for 16–18 year olds.

Writing formulas for ionic compounds | 14-16 years

Practise writing formulas for ionic compounds, revising common cations and anions, using this lesson plan with activities for 14–16 year olds.

Why do chemical reactions happen? | 16-18 years

Introduce students to entropy and explore why chemical reactions happen using role play, discussion and demonstrations in this lesson plan for 16–18 year olds.

How do atoms form the ions in ionic compounds? | 16-18 years

Check students’ understanding of why atoms form ions, and how ionic compounds form by ionic bonding, using this lesson plan with activities for 16–18 year olds.

Where does energy come from? | 16-18 years

Help students explore how energy is released in exothermic reactions and when chemical bonds form using this lesson plan with activities for 16–18 year olds.

What do chemical words mean? Exploring key terms | 14-16 years

Explore and clarify key concepts including substance, pure, element, compound, atom and molecule using this lesson plan with activities for 14–16 year olds.

What do atoms look like? | 16-18 years

Introduce your students to the scanning tunnelling microscope (STM) as a tool for investigating atoms in this lesson plan with activities for 16–18 year olds.

What happens when something dissolves? | 11-14 years

Explore the process of dissolving and help your students explain observations using the particle model with this lesson plan and activities for 11–14 year olds.

Accuracy and precision in practical investigations | 14-16 years

Help your students consolidate their understanding of the difference between accuracy and precision using this lesson plan with activities for 14–16 year olds.

Planning scientific tests to solve a bakery problem | 14-16 years

Develop your students’ practical skills, including planning, observation, measurement and problem-solving, using this active lesson plan for 14–16 year olds.

Practising calculations in chemistry | 14-16 years

Help your students check or revise key calculations in chemistry, including relative formula mass, using this lesson plan with activities for 14–16 year olds.

Bonding bingo: bonds and properties of substances | 14-16 years

Try this game and lesson plan for 14–16 year olds to reinforce students’ understanding of bonding and its relation to the physical properties of substances.

How are particles rearranged when iron burns in air? | 11-14 years

Demonstrate the combustion of iron and explore how particles are rearranged to form iron oxide using this lesson plan with activities for 11–14 year olds.

Calculating and comparing solution concentrations | 16-18 years

Practise calculating the concentration of a solution from the mass of solute and the volume of water using this lesson plan with activities for 16–18 year olds.

Investigating properties of crystals: fact and fiction | 14-16 years

Practise reasoning about scientific evidence to determine if crytals possess ‘special’ properties using this lesson plan with activities for 14–16 year olds.

What happens to particles in chemical reactions? | 11-14 years

Explore what happens to atoms and molecules when new materials are made in chemical reactions, using this lesson plan with activities for 11–14 year olds.

Equilibrium reactions and the factors affecting them | 16-18 years

Check common misconceptions about equilibrium reactions and the effects of concentration, catalysts and temperature using this lesson plan for 16–18 year olds.

How are crystals made? | 11-14 years

Use this lesson plan for 11–14 year olds to introduce the idea that crystals form as a substance cools, and explore how cooling rate affects crystal size.

How can enthalpy changes be measured? | 16-18 years

Introduce your students to Hess’s Law as a means of measuring enthalpy changes using this lesson plan with a simple experiment for 16–18 year olds.

How are fireworks and gunpowder made? | 14-16 years

Explore how fireworks and gunpowder are made using a mixture of chemicals in this lesson plan and directed activity related to text (DART) for 14–16 year olds.

How do catalysts affect reaction rates? | 16–18 years

Investigate how different catalysts affect decomposition of hydrogen peroxide, linking to the Kursk submarine disaster, in this lesson plan for 16–18 year olds

What properties do gases have? | 16-18 years

Investigate the properties of gases and address common misconceptions among students using this lesson plan and series of small experiments for 16–18 year olds.

What is a chemical reaction? | 11-14 years

Explore the key idea that chemical reactions produce one or more new substances while conserving matter in this lesson plan with activities for 11–14 year olds.

Acids and alkalis: a concept cartoon | 11-14 years

Check your students’ understanding of acids and alkalis using this lesson plan with downloadable activities for 11–14 year olds.