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WK | LSN | TOPIC | SUB-TOPIC | OBJECTIVES | T/L ACTIVITIES | T/L AIDS | REFERENCE | REMARKS |
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2 | 1-2 |
CHEMICAL FAMILIES
|
Chemical properties of alkaline earth metals.
Reaction of alkaline earth metals with oxygen.
Chemical properties of alkaline earth metals. Reaction of alkaline earth metals with water. |
By the end of the
lesson, the learner
should be able to:
To describe reaction of alkaline earth metals with oxygen To describe reaction of alkaline earth metals with water. |
Q/A: Review reactions of Mg, Ca, with oxygen.
The corresponding word and then chemical equations are then written and their correctness verified by the teacher. Q/A: Review reaction of metals with water. Writing down word and balanced chemical equations for the reactions. Deduce and discuss the order of reactivity down the group. |
text book
Some alkaline earth metals. |
K.L.B. BOOK IIP. 38
K.L.B. BOOK IIP. 39 |
|
2 | 3 |
CHEMICAL FAMILIES
|
Chemical properties of alkaline earth metals.
Reaction of alkaline earth metals with water.
|
By the end of the
lesson, the learner
should be able to:
To describe reaction of alkaline earth metals with water. |
Q/A: Review reaction of metals with water.
Writing down word and balanced chemical equations for the reactions. Deduce and discuss the order of reactivity down the group. |
Some alkaline earth metals.
|
K.L.B. BOOK IIP. 39
|
|
2 | 4 |
CHEMICAL FAMILIES
|
Reaction of alkaline earth metals with chlorine gas.
|
By the end of the
lesson, the learner
should be able to:
To write balanced equations for reaction of alkaline earth metals with chlorine gas. |
Teacher demonstration- Reaction of sodium with chlorine in a fume chamber.
Q/A: Students to predict a similar reaction between potassium and chlorine. Word and balanced chemical equations for various reactions. Supervised practice. |
Sodium, chlorine.
|
K.L.B. BOOK II P. 41
|
|
3 | 1-2 |
CHEMICAL FAMILIES
|
Reaction of alkaline earth metals with dilute acids.
Chemical formulae of alkaline earth metals. |
By the end of the
lesson, the learner
should be able to:
To write balanced equations for reactions of alkaline earth metals with dilute acids. Write chemical formulae for compounds of alkaline earth metals. Explain formation of hydroxides, oxides and chlorides of alkaline earth metals. |
Changing word to chemical equations.
Supervised practice. Exercise: Completing a table of hydroxides, oxides and chlorides of alkaline earth metals. Discuss combination of ions of alkaline earth metals with anions. |
revision book
text book |
K.L.B. BOOK II PP. 43
K.L.B. BOOK II PP. 45-47 |
|
3 | 3 |
CHEMICAL FAMILIES
|
Uses of some alkaline earth metals and their compounds.
|
By the end of the
lesson, the learner
should be able to:
State uses of alkaline earth metals. |
Descriptive approach: Teacher elucidates uses of alkaline earth metals.
|
text book
|
K.L.B. BOOK II PP. 45-47
|
|
3-4 |
AGM |
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4 | 2 |
CHEMICAL FAMILIES
|
Halogens.
Physical properties of halogens.
|
By the end of the
lesson, the learner
should be able to:
Identify halogens in the periodic table. Give examples of halogens. Identify physical states of halogens. |
Teacher demonstration: - To examine electrical properties of iodine, solubility in water of chlorine.
|
Iodine crystals, electrical wire, a bulb.
|
KLB BK II
P. 47 |
|
4 | 3 |
CHEMICAL FAMILIES
|
Comparative physical properties of halogens.
Chemical properties of halogens. |
By the end of the
lesson, the learner
should be able to:
To state and explain the trends in physical properties of halogens. |
Examine a comparative table of physical properties of halogens.
Discuss the deductions made from the table. |
text book
Chlorine, iron wool, bromine. |
K.L.B. BOOK II P. 47
|
|
4 | 4 |
CHEMICAL FAMILIES
|
Equations of reaction of halogens with metals.
|
By the end of the
lesson, the learner
should be able to:
To write balanced chemical equations of reactions involving halogens. |
Re-write word equations as chemical equations then balance them.
Supervised practice. |
text book
|
K.L.B. BOOK II P. 50
|
|
5 | 1-2 |
CHEMICAL FAMILIES
|
Reaction of halogens with water.
|
By the end of the
lesson, the learner
should be able to:
To describe reaction of halogens with water and the results obtained. |
Bubbling chlorine gas through water.
Carry out litmus test for the water. Explain the observations. |
Chlorine gas, litmus papers.
|
K.L.B. BOOK II P. 51
|
|
5 | 3 |
CHEMICAL FAMILIES
|
Some uses of halogens and their compounds.
|
By the end of the
lesson, the learner
should be able to:
To state uses of halogens and their compounds. |
Teacher elucidates uses of halogens and their compounds.
|
text book
|
K.L.B. BOOK II pp 52
|
|
5-6 |
Mass |
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6 | 2 |
CHEMICAL FAMILIES
STRUCTURE & BONDING |
Noble Gases.
Comparative physical properties of noble gases.
Uses of noble gases. Chemical bonds. Ionic bond. |
By the end of the
lesson, the learner
should be able to:
To describe physical properties of noble gases. To explain physical properties of noble gases. |
Make A comparative analysis of tabulated physical properties of noble gases.
|
text book
|
K.L.B. BOOK IIPP. 52-53
|
|
6 | 3 |
STRUCTURE & BONDING
|
Ionic bond representation.
Grant ionic structures. |
By the end of the
lesson, the learner
should be able to:
Use dot and cross diagrams to represent ionic bonding. |
Drawing diagrams of ionic bonds.
|
Chart- dot and cross diagrams.
Models for bonding. Giant sodium chloride model. |
K.L.B. BOOK II P. 58
|
|
6-7 |
Eid Al-adha |
|||||||
7 | 2 |
STRUCTURE & BONDING
|
Physical properties of ionic compounds.
|
By the end of the
lesson, the learner
should be able to:
Describe physical properties of ionic compounds. Explain the differences in the physical properties of ionic compounds. |
Analyse tabulated comparative physical properties of ionic compounds.
Teacher asks probing questions. |
text book
|
K.L.B. BOOK IIPP 58-59
|
|
7 | 3 |
STRUCTURE & BONDING
|
Covalent bond.
Co-ordinate bond. |
By the end of the
lesson, the learner
should be able to:
Explain the formation of covalent bond Use dot and cross diagrams to represent covalent bond. |
Exposition: Shared pair of electrons in a hydrogen molecule, H2O, NH3, Cl2, and CO2.
Drawing of dot-and-cross diagrams of covalent bonds. |
text book
|
K.L.B. BOOK II PP 60-63
|
|
7 | 4 |
STRUCTURE & BONDING
|
Molecular structure.
Trend in physical properties of molecular structures. |
By the end of the
lesson, the learner
should be able to:
To describe the molecular structure. To give examples of substance exhibiting molecular structure |
Discussion ? To explain formation of the giant structure and give examples of substance exhibiting molecular structure.
|
text book
Sugar, naphthalene, iodine rhombic sulphur. |
K.L.B. BOOK IIP 65
|
|
8 | 1-2 |
STRUCTURE & BONDING
|
Giant atomic structure in diamond.
Giant atomic structure in graphite. Metallic bond. Uses of some metals. |
By the end of the
lesson, the learner
should be able to:
To describe giant atomic structure in diamond. To state uses of diamond. To describe mutual electronic forces between electrons and nuclei. To describe metallic bond. To compare physical properties of metals. To state uses of some metals. |
Diagrammatic representation of diamond.
Discuss uses of diamond. Discussion: Detailed analysis of comparative physical properties of metals and their uses. Probing questions & brief explanations. |
Diagrams in textbooks.
text book |
K.L.B. BOOK II P 69
K.L.B. BOOK IIP 70 |
|
8 | 3 |
PROPERTIES AND TRENDS ACROSS PERIOD THREE
|
Physical properties of elements in periods.
|
By the end of the
lesson, the learner
should be able to:
To compare electrical conductivity of elements in period 3 |
Group experiments- Construct electrical circuits incorporating a magnesium ribbon, then aluminum foil, then sulphur in turns.
The brightness of the bulb is noted in each case. Discuss the observations in terms of delocalised electrons. |
The periodic table.
|
K.L.B. BOOK IIP. 76
|
|
8 | 4 |
PROPERTIES AND TRENDS ACROSS PERIOD THREE
|
Physical properties of elements in period 3.
Chemical properties of elements in period 3. |
By the end of the
lesson, the learner
should be able to:
To compare other physical properties of elements across period 3. |
Analyse comparative physical properties presented in form of a table.
Explain the trend in the physical properties given. |
The periodic table.
|
K.L.B. BOOK II P. 77
|
|
9 | 1-2 |
PROPERTIES AND TRENDS ACROSS PERIOD THREE
|
Chemical properties of elements in the third period.
Oxides of period 3 elements. Chlorides of period 3 elements. |
By the end of the
lesson, the learner
should be able to:
To compare reactions of elements in period 3 with water To explain chemical behavior of their chlorides. To describe hydrolysis reaction. |
Q/A: Review reaction of sodium, Mg, chlorine, with water.
Infer that sodium is most reactive metal; non-metals do not react with water. Comparative analysis, discussion and explanation. |
The periodic table.
|
K.L.B. BOOK II PP. 80-81
K.L.B. BOOK II PP. 77-78 |
|
9-10 |
Midterm |
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10 | 2 |
SALTS
|
Types of salts.
Solubility of salts in water. |
By the end of the
lesson, the learner
should be able to:
Define a salt. Describe various types of salts and give several examples in each case. |
Descriptive approach. Teacher exposes new concepts.
|
text book
Sulphates, chlorides, nitrates, carbonates of various metals. |
K.L.B. BOOK II P. 91
|
|
10-12 |
End term exams |
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12 | 2 |
SALTS
|
Solubility of bases in water.
|
By the end of the
lesson, the learner
should be able to:
To test solubility of various bases in water. To carry out litmus test on the resulting solutions. |
Class experiments- Dissolve salts in 5cc of water.
Record the solubility in a table, Carry out litmus tests. Discuss the results. |
Oxides, hydroxides, of various metals, litmus papers.
|
K.L.B. BOOK IIPP. 94-95
|
|
12 | 3 |
SALTS
|
Methods of preparing various salts.
|
By the end of the
lesson, the learner
should be able to:
To describe various methods of preparing some salts. |
Experimental and descriptive treatments of preparation of salts e.g. ZnSO4, CuSO4, NaCl and Pb(NO3)2.
|
CuO, H2SO4, HCl, NaOH, PbCO3, dil HNO3.
|
K.L.B. BOOK II pp96
|
|
12 | 4 |
SALTS
|
Direct synthesis of a salts.
|
By the end of the
lesson, the learner
should be able to:
To describe direct synthesis of a salt. To write balanced equations for the reactions. |
Group experiments- preparation of iron (II) sulphide by direct synthesis.
Give other examples of salts prepared by direct synthesis. Students write down corresponding balanced equations. |
Iron,
Sulphur |
K.L.B. BOOK II P. 104
|
|
13 | 1-2 |
SALTS
|
Ionic equations.
Effects of heat on carbonates. Effects of heat on nitrates. |
By the end of the
lesson, the learner
should be able to:
To identify spectator ions in double decomposition reactions. To write ionic equations correctly. To state effects of heat on carbonates. To predict products resulting from heating metal carbonates. |
Q/A: Ions present in given reactants.
Deduce the products of double decomposition reactions. Give examples of equations. Supervised practice. Group experiments- To investigate effects of heat on Na2CO3, K2CO3, CaCO3, ZnCO3, PbCO3, e.t.c. Observe various colour changes before, during and after heating. Write equations for the reactions. |
PbNO3, MgSO4 solutions.
Various carbonates. Common metal nitrates. |
K.L.B. BOOK II
K.L.B. BOOK II PP. 108-109 |
|
13 | 3 |
SALTS
|
Effects of heat on sulphates.
Hygroscopy, Deliquescence and Efflorescence. |
By the end of the
lesson, the learner
should be able to:
To state effects of heat on sulphates. To predict products results from heating metal sulphates. |
Group experiments- To investigate effects of heat on various sulphates.
Observe various colour changes before, during and after heating. Write equations for the reactions. |
Common sulphates.
|
K.L.B. BOOK II P. 113
|
|
13 | 4 |
SALTS
|
Uses of salts.
|
By the end of the
lesson, the learner
should be able to:
To state uses of salts |
Teacher elucidates uses of salts.
|
|
K.L.B. BOOK II P. 114
|
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