About This Section
This Grade 10 Chemistry section covers all major topics in the CAPS curriculum for Physical Sciences. Each topic contains interactive lessons, games, and quizzes designed to build understanding step by step. Start with Classification of Matter to build your foundation, then progress through Atomic Structure, Chemical Bonding, Physical and Chemical Change, and finally Chemical Reactions. All pages are mobile-friendly and work on all devices.
How to Study Chemistry
Chemistry becomes clearer when you move from particles to substances to reactions. First understand atoms and electron arrangement, then use that knowledge to explain bonding, classification of matter, physical and chemical change, and balanced equations.
Keep a list of symbols, charges, key definitions, and example equations. When a question asks you to explain a change, mention the evidence: new substance formed, energy change, gas produced, colour change, precipitate formed, or a change that can be reversed physically.
Start Here: Grade 10 Chemistry
Use this Chemistry page to move from matter and particles to bonding, changes, and reactions. The topics are connected, so a weak understanding of atoms or compounds can make later equations and explanations harder.
When revising, compare examples side by side: pure substances and mixtures, elements and compounds, physical and chemical changes, ionic and covalent bonding, and reactants and products.
Build a one-page summary of common definitions and diagrams, then use it while practising until the language becomes familiar.
Also note which topics need calculations, such as mass number or balancing, and which need written explanations, such as bonding and classification.
Learning Path
A useful path from this page is to begin with Back to Physical Sciences and then continue with Start with Classification of Matter. Do not rush through the links; spend time on the examples and make sure you can explain the main idea without looking at the notes.
What to Focus On
Use this page to build scientific concepts, formulas, units, diagrams, investigations, and explanations. Write down key terms, formulas, diagrams, or steps that appear often so that revision becomes active instead of just rereading.
Revision Advice
Write the formula first, substitute values carefully, include units, and revise the theory behind each calculation. After each lesson, close the page and try a short self-test from memory before checking your notes again.
Quick FAQ
Move between notes and practice questions often, because Physical Sciences needs both understanding and calculation fluency. If a topic feels too difficult, return to the previous link, revise the basics, and then try the examples again before using past papers.