A couple of side notes:
- A variety of waste disposal methods are asked for, depending on the station, which was good practice for the students.
- Nine stations may be too many for some classes. I found it perfect for many, but one too many for some.
After the lab, the class shared results as a whole and came up with definitions for physical change, evidence of physical change, chemical change, and evidence of chemical change. These definitions were added to the students' interactive notebooks in the form of the following foldable.
Finally, for the assessment, students were asked to write a well-developed conclusion (at least 4 sentences) about what was learned and what types of observations (evidences) can be used to tell whether a physical or chemical change has occurred.
For those that are interested, the entire lab assignment follows.
Physical vs. Chemical Change Lab
Background Information
How can you describe a pile of gold scientifically? You talk about
its physical and chemical properties. Physical properties are
characteristics that can be observed or measured without changing the makeup of
the substance. Examples of physical properties are each phase of matter, color,
density, weight, volume, texture, taste and smell. Chemical properties are
characteristics that identify the chemical makeup; examples are elements from
the periodic table.
What happens if I want to melt my pile of gold to make coins? This
would result in a physical change. These physical and chemical
properties can change. Physical change defines when a substance has changed its
“look”, but not its chemical substance. Examples of physical changes are
melting, freezing, cutting, boiling or mending. A chemical change forms new
substances; material goes through a chemical reaction. Examples of chemical
reactions are rusting, creation of gases or bubbles, burning wood, cooking.
Pre-Lab:
Write a description of the differences between physical and
chemical reactions. What are properties and changes? What are examples of
physical properties, physical changes, chemical properties and chemical
changes?
Procedure
Set up a data table in your journal that allows for
identification of the station, recording of observations, and whether it was a
physical or chemical change.
Example
data table:
Station #
and name
|
Observations
|
Physical or
chemical change?
|
Station 1
·
Add a small scoopful of sodium chloride into a half-full 100 mL beaker
of water. Stir the contents of the beaker for approximately one minute.
·
Record your observations.
·
Pour the solution down the sink and rinse out the beaker when you are
finished.
Station 2
·
Pick up a small piece of magnesium ribbon with the crucible tongs and
heat it over the Bunsen burner until you observe a change.
Station 3
·
Pick up a small piece of zinc with crucible tongs and heat it over the
Bunsen burner until you observe a change.
·
When you have finished, place the residue into the beaker of water
provided.
Station 4
·
Fill a test tube halfway with silver nitrate solution.
·
Quickly squirt an entire pipette full of sodium chloride solution into
the test tube.
·
Record observations.
·
When you are finished at this station, pour the contents of the test
tube into the waste jar provided, fill the test tube with water (for rinsing)
and pour that water into the waste jar.
Station 5
·
Pour 25 mL of acetone into the glass dish.
·
Place a piece of Styrofoam in the acetone.
·
After making observations, remove the Styrofoam with a glass stirring
rod. Pour the acetone into the used acetone beaker provided.
Station 6
·
Cut a SMALL fresh slice from the potato.
·
Use a dropper to put 3-4 drops of iodine solution on
the potato slice. Record observations.
·
After your observations are complete, throw away the
used slice of potato into the trash can.
Station 7
·
Strike a match and watch it as it burns. Blow the match out before it
burns your fingers.
·
Dispose in the used matches can.
Station 8
·
Pour about 1 cm of hydrochloric acid into a test tube.
·
Place a small chip of marble in the same test tube. Make sure the acid covers the chip.
·
Record observations.
·
When you are finished making observations, pour the test tube contents
into the waste HCl beaker provided and rinse out the test tube.
Station 9
·
Take full dropper of the acetic acid (vinegar) solution and squirt its
contents into a 50 ml beaker.
·
Using the ammonia dropper bottle, add ammonia drop-wise into the 50 ml beaker.
·
When your observations are completed, pour the contents down the drain
and clean the beaker with water.
Data Analysis
Answer the following questions in your journal:
1. List all of the chemical changes you observed.
2. List all of the physical changes you observed.
3. What were some of the observations that indicated a
physical change had occurred?
4. What were some of the observations that indicated a
chemical reaction had occurred?
Conclusion
Write a well-developed conclusion (at least 4 sentences)
about what was learned and what types of observations (evidences) can be used
to tell whether a physical or chemical change has occurred.
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