Form 1 (Grade 9) Chemistry: Acid & Bases: Kenyan curriculum.
Resource types
- Inquiry Learning Spaces
- Online Labs
Country
- Benin
- Kenya
- Nigeria
Subject Domains
- Botany
- Ecology
- Humans And Animals
- Life Processes
- Variation, Inheritance And Evolution
- Analytical Chemistry
- Chemical Reactions
- Inorganic Chemistry
- Physical Chemistry
- Engineering
- Energy
- Environment
- Environmental Protection
- Mathematics
- Electricity And Magnetism
- Energy
- Fields
- Forces And Motion
- History Of Science And Technology
- Light
- Solids, Liquids And Gases
- Tools For Science
- Waves
- Technology
Biology
Chemistry
Environmental Education
Physics
Age Ranges
- 7-8
- 9-10
- 11-12
- 13-14
- 15-16
- Above 16
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On this page, you will find online labs and Inquiry Learning Spaces, which have been selected to fit the curricula of Benin, Kenya, and Nigeria. This page will help you find suitable resources for your classroom activities and easily create Inquiry Learning Spaces for your students.
Need support? Download the Teacher Implementation Manual (English | French) and visit our Support Area.
Are all atoms of an element the same? How can you tell one isotope from another? Use the sim to learn about isotopes and how abundance relates to the average atomic mass of an element.
The objectives of this lab is to help you learn hoe to prepare a standard solution of sodium carbonate and how to determine the strength of a given solution of hydrochloric acid by titrating it against standard sodium carbonate solution.
This lab will allow you to Study the relative reactivity of metals using salt solution.
With this lab you will find out how separation of mixtures is done using the following techniques:
Separating funnel
Chromatography
Centrifugation
Simple distillation
Fractional distillation
An interactive whiteboard activity where students build an atom by dragging electrons, neutrons and protons onto the template. The element information box shows if they are correct. The animation can also be used to show how ions form.
Do you ever wonder how a greenhouse gas affects the climate, or why the ozone layer is important? Use the sim to explore how light interacts with molecules in our atmosphere.
Explore pressure at the atomic level. All matter is made up of atoms, which make up molecules. These atoms and molecules are always in motion. When atoms and molecules are contained, we can measure the amount of pressure they exert on the container.
Investigate the relationship between the volume of a gas and the pressure it exerts on its container. This relationship is commonly known as Boyle's Law. The pressure of a gas tends to decrease as the volume of the gas increases.
Primary aims of the Lab: