Students explore the vast family of carbon-based compounds, discovering why carbon is uniquely suited to forming the complex molecules that make up living things and fuel modern industry.
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Teach: organic, hydrocarbon, alkane, alkene, alcohol, saturated, unsaturated, monomer, polymer. The naming system (meth-, eth-, prop-, but-) comes from Greek numbers — once learned it works for all carbon chains.
Focus on alkanes and their naming before introducing alkenes and alcohols. The concept of carbon bonding is the priority.
Can students draw and name the first four alkanes? Can they explain the difference between a saturated and unsaturated hydrocarbon?
Build molecular models from clay balls and toothpicks or sticks. Draw structural formulas in soil. No specialist chemistry equipment needed.
Students often think organic chemistry only applies to living things. Organic compounds include plastics, fuels, medicines, and many industrial chemicals — the term organic means carbon-based, not necessarily biological.
Organic chemistry is the largest branch of chemistry. Understanding its basics is essential for biology (biochemistry), medicine (drugs), and environmental science (fossil fuels, plastics).
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