What should you always wear to protect your eyes during experiments?
Safety Googles
An "if-then" statement based on a question of interest.
A hypothesis
What is a test tube rack used for?
holding test tubes
What should you always do before starting any lab activity?
Read the instructions and listen to the teacher’s directions
Which gas makes up 78% of the air we breathe?
Nitrogen!
What should you do if you break glass in the lab?
Tell Mrs Delainey or Mrs I, and DO NOT touch with bare hands. Sweep using glass broom into glass waste container, NOT the garbage.
What is the variable that you deliberately change in an experiment?
What piece of equipment is used to heat substances?
Bunsen Burner
What variable do you measure or observe in an experiment? The experimenter cannot directly control this variable.
The dependent variable.
How many elements on the periodic table are named after countries, cities, regions, or continents? (Points awarded to the closest guess).
29
What does WHMIS stand for?
Workplace Hazardous Materials Information System
Jane notices the colour of the liquid in her test tube turns from yellow to blue upon adding a new chemical. What type of observation is this?
Qualitative
Which piece of glassware is best for mixing or holding liquid chemicals, not measuring them?
Beaker or erlenmyer flask
What is the name of the method we use to smell chemicals safely? Demonstrate this!
Wafting (students demonstrate this).
Why do onions make you cry when you cut into them?
They release sulfer compounds, which react with your tears and turn into a mild acid (yes, they literally burn your eyes!)
What does this symbol mean?
Flammable
Why are control variables necessary?
Explain how to properly use a scale to weigh out a dry chemical
Turn it on. Place a weigh boat on the scale. Tare the scale. Scoop out chemical into weigh boat until you reach desired weight. Remove from scale, turn off scale.
Name three different types of quantitative measurements you could take.
answers may vary... (mass, temperature, volume, height, etc...)
Why does your mouth feel cold when you eat a mint or chew gum with menthol?
Menthol is a special chemical that messes with heat receptors in your mouth, and tricks them into thinking your body is literally being frozen.
Capsaiacin, the spicy pepper chemical, also works like this by tricking your heat receptors into thinking you just ate literal fire!
Oxidizer,
List the general steps of the scientific method in order.
Observation → Question → Hypothesis → Experiment → Analysis → Conclusion
(If conclusion does not agree with hypothesis, revise hypothesis and try again).
Carefully pour the liquid into a graduated cylinder, until close to the mark you need. Then use a dropper to slowly add liquid drop by drop until the bottom of the meniscus reaches the measurement you need.
Which WHMIS symbol indicates "kills you later"? What, exactly, does a chemical with this symbol have the potential to do?
Health hazard, will give you cancer later in life, but will not kill you right away like a poison symbol chemical would.
Why does metal feel colder than wood, even if they are at the same temperature?
Metal has a low heat capacity, which means that it changes temperature easily, and more easily sucks away heat from your body, making it feel colder.
(Water has a high heat capacity, which means it resists temperature change. This is why it takes a LONG time to boil water but the pot it is in heats up almost right away on the stove).