Chemistry courses — three levels, one continuous path
Middle school, high school and undergraduate: a complete chemistry program built around the periodic table. Each level covers its official curriculum and ends with a bridge chapter that prepares for the next.
The n+1 preparatory thread
Every level closes with a chapter named "Toward …" — a bridge that introduces concepts of the next level. A motivated middle-schooler walks into high school already familiar with the mole; a high-schooler enters undergrad already aware of atomic orbitals.
- ages 11–153/15 lessons
Middle school
The middle-school program lays the foundations of chemistry: matter, atoms, molecules, transformations. Five chapters to understand that everything — from air to your pen — is made of the same elementary building blocks. The last chapter bridges to high school: you meet the amount of substance and the periodic classification for the first time.
Enter the course - ages 15–183/33 lessons
High school
The high-school program covers Seconde, Première and Terminale (the chemistry side of the French physics-chemistry specialism): structure of matter, transformations, thermochemistry, kinetics, organic chemistry. Six chapters to move from qualitative to quantitative, predictive chemistry. The last chapter bridges to undergraduate-level work.
Enter the course - ages 18+3/38 lessons
University
Undergraduate chemistry (L1–L3): quantum mechanics applied to the atom, bonding theory (MO, hybridization), chemical thermodynamics, advanced kinetics, electrochemistry, advanced organic, inorganic, spectroscopies. Nine chapters to master the concepts that structure research, industry, and computational chemistry. The final chapter bridges to graduate work.
Enter the course