Plan and carry out investigations to support the claim that pure substances can… | Students test pure substances like salt, water, or copper to show that each one has reliable, measurable properties. A substance's solubility, conductivity, and density stay consistent enough to identify what it is. | 8.1 |
Develop and manipulate models to explain changes in particle motion, temperature | Students build and adjust models to show what happens to particles inside a substance when it heats up or cools down, explaining why ice melts, water boils, or steam condenses back into liquid. | 8.2 |
Justify a claim, based on evidence from investigations, that pure substances… | Students investigate materials to show why pure substances (like salt or water) behave differently from mixtures (like saltwater). They back up their conclusion with evidence gathered from hands-on tests. | 8.3 |
Obtain and communicate information from the periodic table, including atomic… | Reading the periodic table, students find each element's atomic number, electron count, and average mass, then use that information to describe how atoms of different elements are built. | 8.4 |
Analyze and interpret data to differentiate among elements based on their… | Students sort elements into groups (metals, nonmetals, or metalloids) by comparing their properties, such as how well they conduct heat or electricity. It's the logic behind the periodic table. | 8.4.a |
Obtain, evaluate, and communicate information from the periodic table to make… | Students read the periodic table to predict how elements will behave in chemical reactions. Elements in the same column share similar traits, so their position on the table hints at how readily they bond with other substances. | 8.5 |
Use valence electron configuration to model ionic and covalent bonds | Students use the outermost electrons of an atom to explain how atoms link together, either by transferring electrons to form ionic bonds or sharing them to form covalent bonds. | 8.5.a |
Observe and analyze data regarding characteristic properties of substances… | Students look at data collected before and after mixing substances to decide whether a chemical reaction happened. They use changes in color, temperature, or gas production as evidence that new matter formed. | 8.6 |
Analyze data from an investigation to determine whether thermal energy is… | Students look at data from a chemistry experiment to figure out whether a reaction gave off heat or soaked it up, the way hand warmers release heat while cold packs absorb it. | 8.7 |
Design and test a device that can release or absorb thermal energy by… | Students design and build a device that releases or absorbs heat through a chemical reaction, then test whether it works as planned. | 8.7.a |
Engage in an argument from evidence to support the claim that matter is… | Students collect data from a chemical reaction and use it to argue that matter isn't created or destroyed, just rearranged into new substances. The atoms going in equal the atoms coming out. | 8.8 |
Use a model to verify that atoms of reactants are conserved as products in a… | Students use drawings or diagrams to show that the same atoms present before a chemical reaction are still there after it, just rearranged into new substances. Nothing is created or lost. | 8.8.a |