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Order these steps for finding the volume of an irregular solid using water displacement in a graduated cylinder.
  • Read and record the final water volume at eye level (bottom of the meniscus).

  • Gently place the irregular object into the cylinder so it becomes fully submerged.

  • Read and record the initial water volume at eye level (bottom of the meniscus).

  • Find the object’s volume by comparing final volume to initial volume.

  • Add enough water to the graduated cylinder to cover the object later.

Course
Everyday Chemistry Foundations: Matter, Atoms, and Reactions
6 units29 lessons
Topics
ChemistryPhysical ScienceEarth & Environmental Science (applications)Mathematics (measurement, ratios, basic quantitative reasoning)Engineering/Technology (applications and lab tools)
About this course

This course builds a practical foundation in chemistry by connecting particle-level ideas to everyday observations. It covers how matter is classified and measured, how atoms are structured into isotopes and ions, and how the periodic table predicts properties and reactivity. Core bonding models (ionic, covalent, metallic) and molecular structure explain formulas, naming, and material behavior. Chemical reactions are explored through evidence of change, common reaction types, and conservation of mass with introductory equation balancing. The course also introduces states of matter, solutions and concentration, acids and bases with pH, and essential lab safety and measurement practices.