C Curriculum Explorer
Science·Matter & Materials·conceptual

Physical vs Chemical Changes

Distinguish between physical changes (reversible, no new substances formed) and chemical changes (new substances formed, often irreversible), using conservation of mass to understand both types

Suggested ages 11–13

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Evidence of understanding

  • Classifies given changes as physical or chemical with justification
  • Explains what conservation of mass means and why mass is conserved in chemical reactions
  • Names observable signs that a chemical reaction has occurred (colour change, gas produced, temperature change, precipitate)
  • Explains why dissolving is a physical change but burning is a chemical change

Assessment prompt

If Physical vs Chemical Changes dissolved sugar in tea versus burnt toast in the toaster, could they explain which is a physical change and which is a chemical change — and what test would show that mass is conserved in both cases?

Standards alignment

MS-PS1-2US · ngss-ms

MS-PS1-2

Next Generation Science Standards (NGSS) Middle School

MS-PS1-5US · ngss-ms

MS-PS1-5

Next Generation Science Standards (NGSS) Middle School

KS3.Sci.Chem.AEC.4GB · uk-nc-2013

Conservation of Mass

The national curriculum in England: Key stages 1 and 2 framework document · KS3

KS3.Sci.Chem.PIS.5GB · uk-nc-2013

Physical vs Chemical Changes

The national curriculum in England: Key stages 1 and 2 framework document · KS3