Xplore ChemEd X

Xplore is your curated gateway to ChemEd X's vast repository of shared knowledge. Designed for high school and college chemistry educators, this hub will allow you to seamlessly explore a wide range of peer-reviewed and moderated content intended for the classroom, laboratory, and professional development.

Activities

Student-centered investigations, labs, and classroom tasks designed to foster engagement and data analysis

How Burning Candle can teach stoichiometry preview image with candle & flame
// Friday, January 10, 2025 Todd Hollis
In 1848 Michael Faraday presented his Christmas Lectures entitled “Chemical History of a Candle” (Hammack and Decoste, 2016).
text over game clue: STOICHIOMETRY SCAVENGER HUNT
// Thursday, March 10, 2022 Nora Walsh
Many of us find stoichiometry to be what I like to think of as “the grind” unit in our chemistry courses. It feels like it never ends and the students can get very burned out with what can feel like repetitive practice. To address this, I designed a stoichiometry scavenger hunt to inject some fun into my stoichiometry unit.

Articles

Pedagogical insights, best practices, and innovative teaching techniques written by practitioners for practitioners.

// Sunday, March 2, 2025 Nora Walsh
Many of us are tasked with planning or teaching chemical quantities and stoichiometry. To support your planning, help you refresh your stoichiometry unit, or provide extra resources to use in your classroom, I have collected some favorite posts on stoichiometry.
text: "Changing the Colour of Whole Fruits!' over colorful fruit
// Tuesday, November 19, 2024 Iain Smellie
Co-Authored by Iain A. Smellie* and Iain L. J. Patterson* *University of St Andrews, School of Chemistry, North Haugh, St Andrews KY16 9ST, United Kingdom
// Sunday, June 22, 2025 Michael Jansen
The purpose of this article is to show how a microtitration can introduce Honors Chemistry students to titrations.

Demonstrations

Visual and engaging demonstrations designed to illustrate chemistry concepts and provoke inquiry.

Assassin's Bottle title card
// Tuesday, September 16, 2025 Tom Kuntzleman
The disappearing rainbow1 is a wonderful chemistry demonstration previously featured here on ChemEdX.2-4 In this experiment, a colorless solution of NaOH is poured into a row of flasks, each containing a different acid–base indicator.
egg carton models
// Friday, February 28, 2025 Dean Campbell
  Egg-lectrons and McLewis Structures: More Representations of Electron Arrangements in Atoms and Molecules Co-Authored with Ali Patel* *Bradley University, Peoria, Illinois

Assessment Tools

Practical resources to help measure student understanding, including formative assessments and quizzes.

Videos as Formative
// Monday, September 29, 2025 Sarah English
In 2015, I began making chemistry videos to reduce the amount of in-class lecturing during exam review. Some students needed a detailed reteach of specific content, others only needed a refresher, and still others grew frustrated when I retaught concepts they already understood well. Creating videos provided the flexibility to meet all of these needs.
Learnging and Earning
// Friday, March 21, 2025 Kevin Morse
I’m just old enough that I never kept a paper gradebook. When I was a student in school, my grades were on paper and arrived in the mail. As a teacher, my grades have always been entered into the computer and sent off to the world with a click of a button. Parents and students know the grade as soon as I share it. 

Blogs

Less formal reflections from educators on their teaching journeys.

A critical Look at Units
// Sunday, May 18, 2025 Michael Jansen
Introduction The proper and consistent use of units throughout calculations is of paramount importance in physical science. This should be inculcated in students from the first day of class. As chemistry educators, we must—without fail—model the proper, consistent use of units and significant figures.1
"Don't Let Acids Make You Salty" title over colorful pH chart
// Sunday, February 16, 2025 Shifra Yonis
In February 2025 we discussed using particle diagrams, calculations, and titration curves to support student understanding of acids, bases, and buffers.  
// Wednesday, November 26, 2025 Beth Haas
I teach an introductory college chemistry course for non-science majors called Chemistry of Everyday Things. Most of my students have little prior science experience, and they often begin the course intimidated by chemistry.

Multimedia/Videos

ChemEd X content includes visual aids and recordings designed to bring abstract concepts to life. Soon our "Chemistry Comes Alive!" video collection will also make the transition to our new platform (expected delivery June 2026).