English Language Arts and Literacy | Grade : 9-10
Strand - Reading in Science and Career and Technical Subjects
Cluster - Key Ideas and Details
[RCA-ST.9-10.3] - Follow precisely a complex multi-step procedure when carrying out experiments, taking measurements, or performing technical tasks, attending to special cases or exceptions defined in the text.
[HS.CHEM.1.6] -
Design ways to control the extent of a reaction at equilibrium (relative amount of products to reactants) by altering various conditions using Le Chatelier’s principle. Make arguments based on kinetic molecular theory to account for how altering conditions would affect the forward and reverse rates of the reaction until a new equilibrium is established.* Clarification Statements: Conditions that can be altered to affect the extent of a reaction include temperature, pressure, and concentrations of reactants. Conditions that can be altered to affect the rates of a reaction include temperature, pressure, concentrations of reactants, agitation, particle size, surface area, and addition of a catalyst. State Assessment Boundaries: Calculations of equilibrium constants or concentrations are not expected in state assessment. State assessment will be limited to simple reactions in which there are only two reactants and to specifying the change in only one variable at a time.
[HS.CHEM.1.9] -
Relate the strength of an aqueous acidic or basic solution to the extent of an acid or base reacting with water as measured by the hydronium ion concentration (pH) of the solution. Make arguments about the relative strengths of two acids or bases with similar structure and composition.
Clarification Statements: Reactions are limited to Arrhenius and Bronsted-Lowry acid-base reaction patterns with monoprotic acids. Comparisons of relative strengths of aqueous acid or base solutions made from similar acid or base substances is limited to arguments based on periodic properties of elements, the electronegativity model of electron distribution, empirical dipole moments, and molecular geometry. Acid or base strength comparisons are limited to homologous series and should include dilution and evaporation of water.