What actually works for DP Chemistry on Monday

I wrote most of this after school on a rainy Thursday, still smelling faintly of magnesium ribbon from Period 5. My Year 12s (mixed SL/HL) had just handed in a kinetics practical, and half my feedback was about command terms, not chemistry. They’d “described” when the markscheme wanted them to “explain,” and a brilliant rate graph went unlabeled because the student wasn’t sure what the IB expects for units. None of that is shocking if you teach DP Chemistry, but it’s the difference between solid understanding and marks lost for style and structure.

When I’m hunting for IB · DP chemistry resources, I don’t just want anything about equilibrium or energetics. I need tasks that use the data booklet sensibly, respect sig figs, and feel like Paper 2 without becoming a clone of it. I keep a small stack of go-to materials in ClassPods and add notes each time I see where students slip. This post is me pulling together what’s actually worked—how I judge alignment fast, a full Hess’s Law lesson that landed, a ready-to-lift rubric, and a few bilingual tweaks I wish I’d used sooner.

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Where DP Chemistry really lives in the IB map

Week 3 of Term 1, my Year 12s hit equilibrium and the HLs immediately wanted to talk Kp while a couple of SLs were still sorting out ICE tables. That’s the IB reality: shared core ideas with different depth and mathematical treatment. Plenty of on-topic worksheets exist, but many miss IB fit—AP-style questions that ignore command terms, British A-level sets that assume different data-booklet values, or “real-world” contexts that waste time without moving toward DP assessment styles.

IB fit, for me, looks like prompts that mirror Paper 2 structure, clean unit handling, and explicit space for method. I also want the vocabulary to be intentional: distinguish “outline” from “explain,” push “evaluate” where synthesis is required, and keep HL-only items flagged so SL students aren’t blindsided. When I’m curating departmental packs, I look for problem sets that ladder from qualitative reasoning to two-step calculations, with a final item that asks students to justify a choice of method. I keep that kind of curation in ClassPods and tag items SL/HL so they’re easy to mix. If you want a place to browse science pieces and see what aligns, I usually start in the community library.

Quick checks I run to spot truly IB-fit materials

Last October, my Year 13 HLs were revising kinetics. I grabbed a glossy-looking worksheet and binned it five minutes later. Why? The what looked fine; the how didn’t match DP. Now I run the same five checks on every resource before it touches my scheme of work.

Check 1: Command terms. The verbs must map to IB expectations. If a long-response asks to “describe” a mechanism but wants rationale, it’s mis-keyed. Check 2: Data booklet dependence. Does the task cue the relevant tables or values students should know how to locate? Check 3: Units and sig figs. Calculations should produce sensible significant figures and use SI units the way IB markers expect. Check 4: Structure. Multi-part questions (a, b, c) should ramp reasoning. Check 5: Markscheme style. Look for point-based marking that rewards method as well as final value.

If a resource passes, I’ll adapt the contexts to our cohort (food chemistry examples land well) and slot it into the week’s plan. If you want to trial a quick auto-generated DP-style set to test these checks, there’s a simple demo here.

A full lesson I ran on Hess’s Law (70 minutes)

Last Friday, my Year 12 SL group groaned at a past-paper item on enthalpy of combustion. We paused, reset, and ran a Hess’s Law lesson that finally clicked.

Objective: Apply Hess’s Law to determine ΔH for a target reaction using given enthalpies of formation/combustion; justify the chosen pathway using IB command terms.

  • 0–6 min – Starter: Two quick true/false on state symbols and standard conditions; one hinge MCQ on sign conventions. Mini whiteboards.
  • 6–28 min – Main: Worked example: Calculate ΔH for formation of CO from C(graphite) and 1/2 O2 using given ΔHf and ΔHcomb values for CO and CO2. I model flipping and scaling equations, then annotating arrows as in the data booklet.
  • 28–45 min – Guided practice: Pairs tackle ethanol combustion to CO and H2 with incomplete data; they must decide which intermediate makes sense and “explain” their choice.
  • 45–58 min – Formative check: Individual short-response: “Determine ΔH for reaction X. Show working, state units with sig figs.” Quick mark with a two-point method tick.
  • 58–70 min – Plenary: Students write one sentence using “Hence, deduce…” to connect Hess’s pathway to the sign of ΔH; cold-call three answers and log common slips.

I pulled the exit ticket into ClassPods so I could tag recurring errors (unit handling and arrow direction won the day). If you want a copy-ready version of this structure, you can spin one up in a few minutes.

Copy-and-adapt: DP Chem short-response rubric (10 marks)

Monday’s mock feedback is faster when I’m marking against the same lenses students practice. This is the rubric I print on the back of topic tests and paste into IA drafts for quick formative notes on calculation/short-response items.

  • Concept accuracy (0–2): 0 = major misconception; 1 = partially correct with gaps; 2 = chemically sound.
  • Use of command terms (0–2): 0 = ignores verb; 1 = attempts but shallow; 2 = matches depth (e.g., “explain” includes cause/why, “deduce” shows reasoning).
  • Method and working (0–2): 0 = no coherent method; 1 = incomplete steps; 2 = clear, logical sequence.
  • Data booklet, units, sig figs (0–2): 0 = not used/incorrect; 1 = minor slips; 2 = correct values, units, and sensible sig figs.
  • Communication (0–2): 0 = disorganized; 1 = some structure; 2 = coherent with labeled quantities.

Question stems I rotate: “Outline the steps…,” “Hence, deduce…,” “Compare the values and comment on reliability…,” “Evaluate the method with one justified improvement.” If you prefer this embedded into a digital sheet with auto totals, duplicate a layout like this from a template.

Mixed-language tweaks, pacing, and turning it into revision

Two weeks before mocks, my Year 13 bilingual group hit a wall on wording, not chemistry. Swapping “account for” to “explain why” in Spanish alongside English moved three students from silence to solid answers. Since then, I plan for language like I plan for titrations.

What helps: a dual-language glossary of command terms taped in books; sentence frames for short responses (“Because…, therefore…”) that reduce cognitive load; and a “terms to watch” box at the top of each worksheet. For pacing, I split heavy-calculation lessons into two passes: first conceptual maps, then arithmetic. I build teacher review with five-minute “red pen” loops where I model correcting one line of working and students mirror.

For revision/homework, I set a weekly mixed-deck: one multiple-choice that forces data-booklet use, one structured calculation, and one justification prompt. I park those decks in ClassPods so I can tag them HL or SL and track who’s struggling with sig figs across weeks. If you like having a bank you can pull from, the science library is a decent starting point to keep everything in one place.

Try the workflow

Chemistry for IB · DP on ClassPods.

Open the right workflow, build a first draft fast, and keep the review step inside the same flow.

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