
Materials Needed
Space Needed
Chairs in a circle or small group clusters
Distinguishing between intramolecular bonds and the attractions between separate molecules.
Students sit in a circle (or small groups). A prompt is given, and each person must contribute an idea, response, or question in turn. No one can skip, and no one can interrupt. Creates equal airtime and prevents dominant voices from taking over. Simple structure, powerful for equity and inclusion.
Learn about this methodologyTime Range
10-25 min
Group Size
8-35
Space Needed
Chairs in a circle or small group clusters
Bloom’s Level
Remember, Understand, Analyze
Peak Energy Moment
The 'Temperature Spike' twist in Step 3. Students are suddenly forced to think at 'high kinetic energy' speeds, leading to rapid-fire, high-energy contributions that simulate a boiling liquid.
The Surprise
The revelation in Round 2 that a massive nonpolar molecule can actually be 'stickier' (higher boiling point) than a small polar one due to 'polarizability'—it's the 'Fat Molecule' vs. 'Sticky Molecule' showdown.
What to Expect
The room will be a low hum of focused whispering during the rounds, followed by frantic, laughing energy during the 'Temperature Spike' as they try to beat the 15-second clock.
3 min • Scenario
Read Aloud
Imagine two people standing 10 feet apart. One is holding a steel chain attached to the other person (Intramolecular Bond). Now imagine a third person walks by, and for just a split second, they make intense eye contact with the first person (Intermolecular Force). If you try to pull the two chained people apart, you need a hacksaw. But to break the eye contact? You just need a distraction. Why is it that the 'distraction' (heat) can turn solid ice into water without ever breaking the oxygen-hydrogen chain inside the water molecule itself?
Life Skills Being Developed
Equitable ContributionRelationship Skills
Ensuring every participant has a protected window to speak without interruption, fostering a sense of belonging and value for all perspectives.
Attentive ListeningSocial Awareness
Focusing entirely on a peer's contribution to build upon their ideas rather than simply waiting for a turn to speak.
Intellectual HumilitySelf-Awareness
Acknowledging when a peer provides a more accurate or clearer explanation and adjusting one's own understanding accordingly.
5 min
Today, we aren't just learning about molecules; we are acting like them. We are using a Round Robin format. You will be in groups of four. I will provide a 'Molecular Mystery' card. One person starts with a 30-second explanation or observation. Then, the person to their right MUST add a new piece of evidence or a 'what-if' scenario. No skipping, no interrupting. We will do three rounds of this, each with a higher level of complexity. Remember: Intra-molecular is the 'marriage' (the bond); Inter-molecular is the 'socializing' (the attraction). Let's see who can explain the invisible forces holding our world together.
Group Formation
Divide the class into 7 groups of 4 students each. Use 'Molecular Match' cards (Water, Ammonia, Methane, etc.) to group students based on their assigned molecule's polarity.
Materials Needed
31 min • 100% Physical
Round 1: The Identity Crisis. Each student identifies the 'strongest' IMF their assigned molecule can form and explains why based on its Lewis structure.
Walk around and listen for the distinction between 'polar' and 'hydrogen bonding capability'. Ensure students aren't confusing the O-H bond with the H-bond itself.
Round 2: The Boiling Point Battle. Groups are given a second molecule. Each student must contribute one reason why Molecule A would have a higher or lower boiling point than Molecule B.
This is the peak energy moment. Students will likely argue about London Dispersion Forces in larger nonpolar molecules vs. Dipole-Dipole in smaller polar ones.
The Twist: The 'Temperature Spike'. Announce that the 'thermal energy' of the room has just doubled. Groups must now rapidly go around the circle and name one physical property that would change for their molecule (viscosity, vapor pressure, etc.) and why.
Force a fast pace. Give them only 15 seconds per person for this round to simulate high kinetic energy.
Final Synthesis: The 'Master Map'. The group works together to rank four different substances from weakest to strongest IMFs based on their Round Robin discussions.
Provide the 'Master Map' worksheet for them to record their final consensus. Check for the 'Big Three': LDF, Dipole-Dipole, and H-Bonding.
If things go sideways
Differentiation Tips
6 min
Why is it a common mistake to say that 'Hydrogen bonds are the strongest bonds' in chemistry?
If London Dispersion Forces are so weak, how can a massive nonpolar molecule like Iodine (I2) be a solid at room temperature?
Did I make sure my teammates felt heard before I shared my own idea?
How did I react when a teammate corrected a mistake I made?
What did I do to keep the conversation going when the group got stuck?
Take a moment to acknowledge the impressive way you all managed the 'flow' of ideas today. It takes maturity to listen as much as you speak.
Exit Ticket
Rank these in order of increasing boiling point and name the primary IMF for each: He, H2O, HCl, CH4.
Connection to Next Lesson
Now that we know how molecules 'stick' together, next time we'll explore what happens when they stick so well they form organized crystals—welcome to the world of Solids and Phase Changes.
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