Leo+DadMade for Leo
Chemical Change
Rung 4 of 4 · Out in the wild

Chemical Change, Out in the Real World

This is where it stops being equations and starts explaining your actual day — and where you learn to run it backwards, from a sign to a verdict.

NESA SC4-CHG-01 Reason it backwards

Play Classify everyday scenarios, then flip a candle between a sealed jar and an open one to watch the scales hold or drop.
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Audio WalkthroughDad & Leo, Two Minutes — Coming Soon
Video ExplainerComing Soon

Once you can spot the signs, you start seeing chemical change running the whole world — and the real skill is going backwards: you're handed the thing you noticed, and you reason back to "was that chemical?"

Chemical Change Is Everywhere

Combustion — fuels reacting with oxygen — powers cars, stoves and campfires: fuel + oxygen → carbon dioxide + water. Cooking is chemistry you can eat: a raw egg's clear goo turns solid and white and never goes back, bread browns, a steak sears — all new substances, none reversible. Rusting slowly eats iron gates and car panels as the metal grabs oxygen and water from the air. And the quietest one is happening inside you right now: respiration, your cells burning glucose with oxygen to release energy — glucose + oxygen → carbon dioxide + water, the very same word equation as a campfire, just gentler and wetter. You breathe out the products.

Say it plainly: most of the chemical change you'll ever meet is a flavour of one move — something reacts with oxygen. Burning, rusting and breathing are all that move at different speeds: fast and flaming, slow and orange, or quiet and alive.

The Real Skill: Reasoning Backwards

Rung 1 went forwards — change first, then spot the signs. Mastery is going backwards. A cut apple turns brown on the bench. Work back: a colour change, hard to reverse, no boiling or mixing — chemical, the flesh reacting with oxygen. A puddle of water disappears overnight. Work back: still water, just gone to vapour, no new substance — purely physical. Two clear liquids are mixed and a cloudy solid appears. Work back: a new solid out of nowhere is a precipitate — chemical. Each time you take the sign and talk back through it to a verdict.

Try the scenario cards in the toy, then play with the sealed-versus-open candle: seal it and the gases are trapped, so the scales hold steady and you can see conservation of mass; open the lid and the products float off, so the reading drops even though nothing was destroyed.

A Depth-study Thread (optional)

This is a lovely launch pad for a Year 8 depth study (the scope sets aside time for one): design a fair test of what speeds up rusting — does water alone do it, does salt make it worse, does air-only keep iron shiny? Set up identical nails in different conditions, change one thing at a time, and watch them over a fortnight. It's real working scientifically (SC4-WS-04, SC4-WS-07) hanging off a single chemical change.

Us, Thinking Out Loud

Breathing and a campfire share a word equation — say back why that's not as weird as it sounds.

The cut apple browns but the puddle just dries up. Talk back through each to its verdict.