Practice a real question • free

Learn faster with bite‑sized practice that actually sticks.

StudyBits turns courses into short lessons + interactive questions. Try one below, then keep going with the full course.

Build your own course
Interactive
Answer, get feedback, and move on.
Personalized
Create courses tailored to your goals.
Track progress
Stay consistent with streaks + goals.
Try a sample question
Answer it, then continue the course

Report Issue

The answer does not look quite right, I don't see the correct answer.
The question does not make sense.
The question has a grammatical error.
One or more of the options is duplicate.
The description is incorrect or incomplete.
An image is missing.
Submit
Order the steps for using an eyewash after a chemical eye exposure.
  • Reach the eyewash and start the water flow immediately.

  • Continue flushing continuously for at least 15 minutes.

  • Hold eyelids open with fingers to ensure water reaches the eye surface.

  • Seek medical evaluation and report the incident after initial flushing.

  • After flushing begins, remove contact lenses if present.

Course
Chemistry 101: Foundations of Matter and Chemical Principles
10 units45 lessons
Topics
ChemistryPhysical ScienceLaboratory ScienceMathematics (algebra-based problem solving)Scientific Inquiry/Engineering Practices
About this course

Establishes core understanding of matter and chemical change through NGSS HS-PS–aligned ideas and practices. Emphasizes safe laboratory technique, measurement with significant figures and dimensional analysis, and evidence-based reasoning. Covers properties and classification of matter; atomic structure, isotopes, and electron configuration; periodic organization and trends; ionic, covalent, and metallic bonding plus intermolecular forces; and nomenclature and formula writing. Develops stoichiometry (mole concept, molar mass, balanced equations, percent yield), reaction types and prediction, states of matter, gas laws, and kinetic molecular theory, thermochemistry and calorimetry, solutions and molarity, introductory acids–bases, kinetics and equilibrium, and a survey of nuclear chemistry.