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Preview of Stoichiometry Step-by-Step Poster – Mole Map High School Chemistry Anchor Chart

Stoichiometry Step-by-Step Poster – Mole Map High School Chemistry Anchor Chart

Created by
PalEducation
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
Preview of Types of Chemical Reactions Poster – Synthesis Decomposition Replacement

Types of Chemical Reactions Poster – Synthesis Decomposition Replacement

Created by
PalEducation
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
Preview of Ionic vs Covalent Bonding Poster – High School Chemistry Comparison Anchor Chart

Ionic vs Covalent Bonding Poster – High School Chemistry Comparison Anchor Chart

Created by
PalEducation
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
Preview of Acids Bases and pH Scale Poster – High School Chemistry Anchor Chart

Acids Bases and pH Scale Poster – High School Chemistry Anchor Chart

Created by
PalEducation
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 •
Preview of Kinematic Equations and Motion Graphs Poster – High School Physics Guide

Kinematic Equations and Motion Graphs Poster – High School Physics Guide

Created by
PalEducation
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
Preview of Speed Velocity Acceleration Poster – Motion Middle School Physics Anchor Chart

Speed Velocity Acceleration Poster – Motion Middle School Physics Anchor Chart

Created by
PalEducation
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
Preview of Greenhouse Effect & Climate Change Poster – Natural vs Enhanced Greenhouse

Greenhouse Effect & Climate Change Poster – Natural vs Enhanced Greenhouse

Created by
PalEducation
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
Preview of Atomic Structure and Subatomic Particles Poster – Protons Neutrons Electrons

Atomic Structure and Subatomic Particles Poster – Protons Neutrons Electrons

Created by
PalEducation
This detailed atomic structure poster features a Bohr model diagram and a comparison table of all three subatomic particles (proton, neutron, electron) with their charge, mass in amu, and location. Students learn the definitions of atomic number and mass number, with a worked example using Carbon-12 (6 protons, 6 neutrons, 6 electrons; atomic number 6; mass number 12). Perfect for: • Middle school and high school chemistry units on atomic structure • Periodic table and element instruction • Cl
Preview of Balanced vs Unbalanced Forces Poster – Net Force Middle School Physics Science

Balanced vs Unbalanced Forces Poster – Net Force Middle School Physics Science

Created by
PalEducation
This clear, side-by-side comparison poster explains balanced and unbalanced forces with six illustrated examples: book on a table, pushing a shopping cart, tug-of-war tie, braking car, constant-speed vehicle, and turning bike. Each scenario shows the forces involved, net force calculation, and resulting motion. Students learn that balanced forces produce no change in motion (Fnet = 0) while unbalanced forces cause acceleration (Fnet ≠ 0). Perfect for: • Middle school and intro high s
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