This high school chemistry poster walks students through solving stoichiometry problems in 4 clear steps using a worked example (grams of CO₂ from 10g CH₄): (1) write the balanced equation, (2) convert given to moles using molar mass, (3) apply the mole ratio from the equation, (4) convert moles to desired unit. A Mole Map at the bottom shows all conversion pathways between mass, moles, particles, and volume. Perfect for: • High school chemistry and AP Chemistry stoichiometry units • Mole conc
This engaging chemistry poster illustrates the Law of Conservation of Mass using the classic baking soda + vinegar reaction. Students see that mass before (150.0 g) equals mass after (150.0 g), and a molecular diagram shows exactly how atoms rearrange — not disappear — during the reaction. The reactant and product molecules are shown with atom counts to reinforce that atoms are simply reorganized, not lost or gained. Perfect for: • Middle school and high school chemistry units • Chemical react
This comprehensive genetics anchor chart walks students through Punnett Squares step by step. It covers key vocabulary (genotype, phenotype, dominant, recessive, homozygous, heterozygous) and demonstrates two complete worked examples: a Purebred Tall (TT) × Purebred Short (tt) cross yielding 100% Tt offspring, and a Hybrid Tall (Tt) × Hybrid Tall (Tt) cross yielding the classic 3:1 phenotype ratio. A color key helps students visualize allele combinations. Perfect for: • Middle school genetics
This colorful chemistry poster covers all five major reaction types with general formulas, molecular diagrams, and balanced equation examples: Synthesis (2Mg + O₂ → 2MgO), Decomposition (2H₂O → 2H₂ + O₂), Single Replacement (Zn + 2HCl → ZnCl₂ + H₂), Double Replacement (NaCl + AgNO₃ → NaNO₃ + AgCl), and Combustion (CH₄ + 2O₂ → CO₂ + 2H₂O). Color-coded sections make each type instantly recognizable. Perfect for: • High school and middle school chemistry reaction type units • Balancing equations
This detailed side-by-side chemistry comparison poster explains ionic bonds (electron transfer, metal + nonmetal, forms ions, crystalline lattice, NaCl example) vs. covalent bonds (electron sharing, nonmetal + nonmetal, forms molecules, H₂O example with bent geometry and polarity). A quick comparison table summarizes formation, elements, particles, force, state, conductivity, and melting point for both bond types. Perfect for: • High school chemistry and AP Chemistry bonding units • Chemical b
This high-impact chemistry poster presents the full 0–14 pH scale with real-world substance examples (stomach acid, coffee, blood, pure water, ammonia, bleach), definitions of acids and bases as proton donors/acceptors, litmus paper indicators, strong vs. weak acid/base distinctions, and the neutralization reaction (HCl + NaOH → NaCl + H₂O). Ion concentration graphs clearly show how [H⁺] and [OH⁻] change across the scale. Perfect for: • High school chemistry and AP Chemistry acid-base units •
This comprehensive high school physics reference poster presents all four kinematic equations (v = v₀ + at; Δx = v₀t + ½at²; v² = v₀² + 2aΔx; Δx = ½(v + v₀)t) alongside a complete guide to reading and interpreting position-time, velocity-time, and acceleration-time graphs. A decision flowchart at the bottom helps students identify which equation to use based on the missing variable. Perfect for: • High school physics and AP Physics kinematics units • Motion graphs and equations of motion instr
This detailed three-part poster illustrates all three types of tectonic plate boundaries with stunning 3D cross-section diagrams: Divergent (plates moving apart, mid-ocean ridges), Convergent (subduction, volcanic arcs, mountain building), and Transform (plates sliding past each other, earthquakes). Real-world examples include the Mid-Atlantic Ridge, Himalayas, Andes, and San Andreas Fault. Perfect for: • Middle school plate tectonics and Earth science units • Earthquake and volcano
This vibrant, student-friendly science poster covers all three types of symbiotic relationships: Mutualism (+/+), Commensalism (+/0), and Parasitism (+/−). Each type is clearly defined with visual examples including bee & flower, clownfish & anemone, barnacles on a whale, remora fish on a shark, tick on a dog, tapeworm in intestines, and mistletoe on a tree. Color-coded sections and emoji-style icons help students quickly understand and remember each relationship type. Perfect for: • Middle sc
This colorful motion poster explains the difference between speed (scalar), velocity (vector), and acceleration (change in velocity), complete with formulas, distance-time graphs, and example calculations. Students see how each concept is graphed on distance-time plots and learn to calculate speed (d/t) and acceleration (Δv/t) with worked example problems. The memorable tagline — "Speed is HOW FAST, Velocity includes WHERE, Acceleration is the CHANGE!" — helps students keep the three concepts st
This comprehensive wave properties poster covers both transverse and longitudinal waves. Students learn wave anatomy (crest, trough, amplitude, wavelength, compressions, rarefactions), key formulas (v = fλ; f = 1/T), and concepts including frequency, period, and amplitude. Real-world examples connect high/low frequency to pitch and color. A worked example section demonstrates formula application. Perfect for: • Middle school physical science and physics units on waves • Sound and light instruc
This stunning full-body diagram illustrates how 8 major body systems interact to maintain homeostasis: Nervous, Circulatory, Respiratory, Digestive, Muscular, Endocrine, Immune, and Skeletal systems. Color-coded arrows clearly show how each system communicates and cooperates with the others. A legend and brief homeostasis definition are included at the bottom. Perfect for: • Middle and high school human body unit • Teaching organ system interactions and homeostasis • Science bulletin boards an
This richly illustrated rock cycle diagram shows how any rock can become any other type over time. Students will see the processes connecting all three rock types: igneous (cooling & crystallization), sedimentary (compaction & cementation), and metamorphic (heat & pressure), as well as weathering/erosion, melting, and more. Examples include granite, obsidian, sandstone, shale, gneiss, and marble. Perfect for: • Middle school geology units • Rock and mineral identification lessons • E
This clear and colorful pyramid diagram illustrates the five levels of organization in multicellular organisms: Cells → Tissues → Organs → Organ Systems → Organism. Each level is illustrated with relatable examples (muscle cell, nerve cell, muscle tissue, nervous tissue, heart, brain, circulatory system, nervous system, and a human). The "increasing complexity" arrow reinforces the hierarchical structure. Perfect for: • Middle school life science and biology units • Introducing cell theory and
This detailed energy pyramid poster illustrates the 10% Rule of energy transfer across trophic levels. Students will see exactly how energy flows from Producers (10,000 units) through Primary Consumers (1,000 units), Secondary Consumers (100 units), and Tertiary Consumers (10 units), with 90% lost as heat at each level. Realistic animal illustrations at every trophic level make this poster both visually engaging and scientifically accurate. Perfect for: • Middle school ecology and food web uni
This chalkboard-style high school physics poster covers the complete Work-Energy-Power unit: Work (W = F·d·cos θ), Kinetic Energy (KE = ½mv²), Potential Energy (PE = mgh), Conservation of Energy (KEᵢ + PEᵢ = KEf + PEf), and Power (P = W/t). A fully worked frictionless ramp example problem walks students through applying conservation of energy from start to finish, solving for final velocity. Perfect for: • High school physics and AP Physics units on energy • Work-energy theorem instruction • C
This three-part chemistry guide covers everything students need to know about mixtures and solutions. Part 1 compares heterogeneous mixtures (salad, trail mix, sand & water) to homogeneous mixtures (air, steel). Part 2 explains solutions including solute, solvent, and the difference between saturated and unsaturated solutions. Part 3 covers three separation methods: filtration, evaporation, and magnetism, each with a real-world example. Perfect for: • Middle school chemistry and ph
This clear, sequential poster explains the connected processes of Weathering, Erosion, and Deposition. Students learn the two types of weathering (physical/mechanical and chemical), four agents of erosion (water, wind, ice, gravity), and three landforms created by deposition (deltas, beaches, dunes). The simple summary at the bottom — "Weathering Breaks → Erosion Moves → Deposition Drops" — gives students a memorable framework. Perfect for: • Middle school Earth science units on surface proces
This high school physics poster presents all three of Newton's Laws with clear free-body diagrams and worked calculations. Law 1 (Inertia): ΣF = 0 ↔ v = constant, illustrated with a book on a desk. Law 2 (Acceleration): ΣF = ma, illustrated with a box being pushed across a floor with friction. Law 3 (Action-Reaction): F₁₂ = −F₂₁, illustrated with a rocket launch. Each section includes a calculation example with real numbers. Perfect for: • High school physics and AP Physics mechanics
This visually rich poster explains Earth's climate balance step by step: sunlight enters, Earth re-radiates as infrared, greenhouse gases trap heat, and some escapes. It contrasts the natural vs. enhanced (human-caused) greenhouse effect, identifies key greenhouse gases (CO₂, CH₄, N₂O, H₂O vapor), and includes the Keeling Curve showing CO₂ rising from ~280 to 420+ ppm since 1800. Four impacts of global warming are illustrated: temperature rise, ice melt, sea level rise, and extreme weather. Pe
9th - 12th
Earth Sciences, Environment, General Science
NGSS
HS-ESS3-5
$2.50
Original Price $2.50
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