Cool Chemistry: Middle School
Cool Chemistry: Middle School
Cool Chemistry: Middle School
Middle School
TEKS
Vocabulary
chemical change, chemical reaction, cirrhosis of the liver, colon cancer, Crohn’s disease,
digestive system, electrons, esophagus, gall stones, gallbladder, hepatitis B, hepatitis C,
iodine, irritable bowel syndrome, lactose intolerance, large intestine, liver, neutrons, pancreas,
periodic table of elements, physical change, protons, salivary glands, small intestine, starch,
stomach
Pre-Show Activity
Post this question on the board: “How do we know if matter has undergone a chemical change?”
Materials:
Per student: index card, copy of Digestive System Parts chart (Appendix A-1)
Procedure:
1. Instructional Focus Activity: you will need a dollar bill or higher denomination, tongs,
matches or a lighter, salt, a solution of 50% alcohol and 50% water (you can mix 95%
alcohol with water in a 1:1 ratio, if desired). Before the students enter, complete the
following steps:
Add a pinch salt or other colorant to the alcohol/water solution, to help produce a
visible flame.
Use tongs to pick up the bill. Allow any excess liquid to drain. Move the damp bill
away from the alcohol-water solution.
When students arrive, tell them that you are going to light this one dollar bill on fire. Ask:
“What changes would you expect to see and why?”
Light the bill on fire and allow it to burn until the flame goes out. Have students discuss
possible explanations in small groups.
A combustion reaction occurs between alcohol and oxygen, producing heat and light
(energy) and carbon dioxide and water.
When the bill is soaked an alcohol-water solution, the alcohol has a high vapor
pressure and is mainly on the outside of the material (a bill is more like fabric than
paper, which is nice, if you've ever accidentally washed one). When the bill is lit, the
alcohol is what actually burns. The temperature at which the alcohol burns is not
high enough to evaporate the water, which has a high specific heat, so the bill
remains wet and isn't able to catch fire on its own. After the alcohol has burned, the
flame goes out, leaving a slightly damp dollar bill.
http://chemistry.about.com/od/demonstrationsexperiments/ss/burnmoney_2.htm
2. Tell students that today they are going to be studying chemical changes in matter. Ask
them what they know about chemical changes. Record their answers on a chart paper.
Students should create a T-chart in their science notebook. One side is labeled “Physical
Change” and the other side is labeled “Chemical Change”. Ask: “What is the difference
between a chemical change and a physical change?” Record differences in their chart as
teacher records them on the board or chart paper. Students should understand that in
physical changes, no new substance is created. In a chemical change, a new type of
matter is always created.
3. Students will identify chemical and physical changes. Give each student an index card.
On one side they will put a capital P and on the other side a capital C. The teacher will
hold up a change card or state a change. If it is a chemical change, students will hold up
the C card. If it is a physical change, students will hold up the P card. Discuss each
change as you go.
Changes: burning toast, baking bread, boiling water, fresh lemonade, lighting fireworks,
mowing the lawn, digesting food, photosynthesis, frying eggs, cracking eggs, lighting a
match, ice melting, rusting nails, slicing bread, roasting marshmallows.
4. Ask students, “Is it true that if you swallow your gum it stays in your stomach for up to
seven years?” “What happens in your stomach when you swallow something?” “What
kinds of changes are occurring?”
5. Working in groups, students will research the changes that occur in the digestive system
when we eat. There is a great slide show students can use to complete their research on
the Mayo Clinic website at http://www.mayoclinic.com/health/digestive-system/DG00021.
See Appendix A-1 for chart.
Materials: Periodic Table of Elements, 3x5 note cards, science reference books or Internet
access.
Procedure:
1. Give each student a copy of the periodic table of elements. This can probably be found in
their science textbook.
2. Have students work in groups to complete a T-chart about the table. In one column they
need to write everything that they know about the table. In the other column, they need to
write questions.
4. Tell students that they have been learning about elements and the properties of matter.
There are many elements, each with its own set of properties. People use elements for
different purposes, based on these properties. In this activity, students will learn more
about the different chemical and physical properties of matter by creating their own element
trading card collection.
5. Students will make element trading cards. Each card should have the square with element
information from the periodic table, the number of protons, neutrons, and electrons, who
discovered it and when, physical properties and important uses (see Appendix A-2). Each
student should make five cards. Be sure that each student in a small group is assigned five
different elements.
6. When students have finished, combine cards together in small groups. Here are some
activities students can do with them:
Materials: small baby food jar, red food coloring, powdered bleach, teaspoon
Procedure:
Students should observe that the red color starts to fade and finally disappears. The water
becomes clear except for any undissolved bleach.
When the powdered bleach is added to the water it begins to slowly give off oxygen. The
combination of this oxygen with the red dye causes the color to fade until it becomes colorless.
Procedure:
1. Cut two small pieces from a slice of white bread about one square inch each.
2. Place one piece in your mouth and chew it thirty times. It will become very mushy. Make
an effort to mix as much saliva as possible with the bread.
3. Spit the mushy bread and saliva mixture onto a piece of waxed paper.
4. Place the second dry piece of bread on a separate piece of waxed paper.
The unchewed bread turns a dark blue-purple. The bread-saliva mixture does not turn dark. The
starch in the bread combines with iodine to form an iodine-starch molecule. These molecules are
blue-purple in color. Chewing bread mixes it with saliva. The saliva chemically changes the large
Procedures:
1. Students will research digestive system diseases and explain the chemical and physical
changes that occur (see chart in Appendix A-3).
Possible diseases to research: lactose intolerance, irritable bowel syndrome, colon cancer,
cirrhosis of the liver, hepatitis B, hepatitis C, gall stones, Crohn’s disease, etc.
A-1
Esophagus
Stomach
Small Intestine
Large Intestine
Discovered by ____________________
Physical Properties:
Important Uses:
Name of Disease:
Disease Explanation:
Cause of disease: