docx, 215 KB
docx, 215 KB
docx, 3.57 MB
docx, 3.57 MB
docx, 1.72 MB
docx, 1.72 MB
pdf, 971.99 KB
pdf, 971.99 KB
pdf, 3.21 MB
pdf, 3.21 MB
pdf, 1.31 MB
pdf, 1.31 MB

AQA A-level chemistry unit 3.1.12 Acids and Bases - Three lesson / revision workbooks and notes with answers covering the whole unit.

These workbooks cover a whole unit of work combining detailed information sections with Cornell note taking so the books can be used while you teach and students can add their own notes and ideas down the margin.

Colour is used consistently for the different types of sections to make the booklet more dyslexia friendly as I have found that chemistry notes and questions can often be very dense, and somewhat inaccessible for all students but especially those who have dyslexia.

The booklets can also be produced as a revision guide for the topic and contains all the notes and practice past paper questions you need to revise along with worked examples. Parent and student friendly also.

These three work books are provided in word and pdf.

Contents
Workbook Part 1 - 21 pages

  • Brønsted Lowry Theory - Strong and Weak Acids and Bases
  • Acid Dissociation
  • pH
  • Calculating pH of strong acids
  • The ionic product of water KW
  • Calculating pH of a strong base

Workbook Part 2 - 25 pages

  • Weak acid dissociation constant Ka
  • Calculating the pH of a weak acid
  • Determining Ka by experimental methods
  • Titration curves
  • Indicators for titrations
  • Calibrating pH meters

Workbook Part 3 - 29 pages

  • Buffer solutions
  • Acidic buffers
  • Basic buffers
  • Calculating the pH of acidic buffer solutions

Review

5

Something went wrong, please try again later.

maxentropy

5 years ago
5

A rather excellent resource which is presented with great clarity in terms of chemical content and visual appeal. A super self-study resource with lots of explanation and example Qs / solutions matched to the spec. <br /> Cornell note style is well underused in my opinion - this is a USP of this resource set!<br /> One suggestion from me - students who present with Irlens syndrome (a perceptual processing disorder of visual information) could benefit from a different coloured background. Easy to change most of these booklet sheets, but not (for me!) some of the exam Q/A backgrounds. I'm sure this author is able to suggest a fix!<br /> Superb resources.

Report this resourceto let us know if it violates our terms and conditions.
Our customer service team will review your report and will be in touch.