Edudrona's class 12 online chemistry tuition gives students 1-on-1 live sessions with subject-specialist teachers, a personalised chapter-wise study plan, weekly tests, and previous year question practice — covering the full CBSE and ICSE syllabus including Organic, Physical, and Inorganic Chemistry. Book a free demo class today.
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Class 12 Chemistry has a way of catching students off guard. You enter the year feeling fairly prepared, and then by November, Electrochemistry numericals are piling up, Organic Chemistry conversions are making no sense, and the board exam is closer than it looks. Most students don't fail because they aren't studying — they struggle because no one slowed down long enough to explain the logic behind the subject.
That's exactly what Edudrona's class 12 chemistry tuition online is built to fix. Not a pre-recorded lecture you can skip through. Not a 60-student batch where your doubts get parked for "later." A real teacher, in a live 1-on-1 session, working through Chemistry with you at your pace — chapter by chapter, concept by concept, until it actually makes sense.
Whether you're targeting 90+ in CBSE boards, preparing for NEET, aiming for JEE, or simply trying to stop losing marks on topics you thought you understood, this page will tell you exactly what we offer, how it works, and why it might be the right fit for you. If you're also evaluating broader support across subjects, check out our online class 12 tuition classes for a full picture of what Edudrona offers at this level.
Before we talk about solutions, it helps to understand the problem clearly. Class 12 Chemistry is not difficult because the content is impossible. It's difficult for a specific set of reasons that trip up even hardworking students.
The first reason is the sheer breadth of the syllabus. In a single year, you're covering Physical Chemistry (Solutions, Electrochemistry, Chemical Kinetics, Surface Chemistry, Solid State), Organic Chemistry (seven chapters, each with its own reaction types and mechanisms), and Inorganic Chemistry (p-block, d-block, f-block, and Coordination Compounds). These are not small topics. Each one could fill an entire semester at the undergraduate level, and yet students are expected to master all three branches in Class 12.
The second reason is that Organic and Inorganic Chemistry specifically require a different kind of learning than most students are used to. Physics and Maths reward calculation practice. Organic Chemistry rewards understanding patterns — if you understand why a nucleophile attacks an electrophile, a whole family of reactions suddenly makes sense. But if you've only memorised the reactions without the underlying logic, each new conversion feels like starting from zero.
The third reason is classroom time constraints. No school teacher, however excellent, can give a class of 35–40 students the depth of explanation that Chemistry actually demands. Topics like Electrochemistry (which has both concept-heavy theory and calculation-heavy numericals), Coordination Chemistry (which has its own nomenclature system, bonding theories, and isomerism types), and Organic reaction mechanisms simply cannot be covered at the speed most school schedules require.
Students who do well in Class 12 Chemistry — consistently, year after year — tend to have one thing in common: a teacher who had the time to go deep. That's what our class 12 online chemistry tuition gives you.
Our classes follow the full CBSE and ICSE syllabus for Class 12 Chemistry. Below is a chapter-by-chapter breakdown of what's covered and, more importantly, how we approach each section — because the approach matters as much as the content.
Physical Chemistry is where students either build a strong numerical foundation or start losing marks they could easily have won. We cover all five chapters in detail.
The Solid State — crystal structures, unit cells, packing efficiency, defects, and electrical properties. This chapter has a higher theory-to-numerical ratio than others, and we make sure students don't just memorise crystal structures but can actually work through the logic of why certain solids have certain properties.
Solutions — types of solutions, solubility, vapour pressure, colligative properties (relative lowering of vapour pressure, elevation of boiling point, depression of freezing point, osmotic pressure), and abnormal molar masses. This chapter is consistently one of the most numerical-heavy in boards and a frequent source of NEET and JEE questions. We spend dedicated time on Raoult's Law problems and van't Hoff factor calculations.
Electrochemistry — conductance, Kohlrausch's Law, electrolytic and galvanic cells, Nernst equation, standard electrode potentials, Gibbs energy, and batteries and fuel cells. This is one chapter where students routinely lose marks despite revising it, usually because they memorised the formulas without understanding the direction of cell reactions. We work through this using conceptual explanations before any numerical practice.
Chemical Kinetics — rate of reaction, rate laws, integrated rate equations, half-life, Arrhenius equation, and collision theory. The numericals here are predictable and high-scoring if practised systematically, which is exactly how we approach it.
Surface Chemistry — adsorption isotherms, colloids, emulsions, and catalysis. This chapter has a higher weight in theory and a lower numerical burden, but students underestimate it. We cover it thoroughly because one or two marks lost here can affect your final grade.
Organic Chemistry is where Class 12 Chemistry is either won or lost — particularly in NEET, where it carries significant weight. Our approach here is built around understanding mechanisms, not memorisation.
Haloalkanes and Haloarenes — SN1 vs SN2 reactions, stereochemistry, optical activity, and reactions of haloarenes including nucleophilic aromatic substitution. We spend time here because students who understand substitution mechanisms handle the rest of Organic Chemistry significantly better.
Alcohols, Phenols, and Ethers — acidic nature, oxidation patterns, esterification, Lucas test, and reactions of phenols including Kolbe's reaction and Reimer-Tiemann reaction. Each reaction type is taught with its conditions so students can write the complete reaction in an exam, not just the product.
Aldehydes, Ketones, and Carboxylic Acids — nucleophilic addition reactions, aldol condensation, Cannizzaro reaction, and the reactions of carboxylic acid derivatives. Conversion questions from this chapter are a staple of both boards and competitive exams.
Amines — basicity, preparation from different starting materials, and reactions including diazotisation. Named reactions here are frequently asked in boards and students often lose marks because they confuse the conditions.
Biomolecules — carbohydrates, proteins, enzymes, vitamins, nucleic acids, and hormones. This is a relatively theory-heavy chapter with a lot of definitions and classification, and we cover it in a way that makes the categorisations memorable rather than just a list to memorise.
Polymers — addition vs condensation polymers, natural vs synthetic rubber, biodegradable vs non-biodegradable, and copolymers. While this chapter is shorter, it's regularly tested in multiple-choice format in both boards and NEET.
Chemistry in Everyday Life — drugs, food additives, cleansing agents, and chemicals in medicine. Often treated as revision material, but it carries direct marks in boards and should not be left to the last week.
Inorganic Chemistry has a reputation for being a memory-heavy chapter dump. Our approach is to find the patterns — because even in p-block and d-block, there are trends and logical explanations that make the content far easier to retain.
General Principles and Processes of Isolation of Elements — metallurgy, types of ores, extraction processes, and refining methods. We link this to real-world contexts (why iron is extracted differently from aluminium, for example) which helps the information stick.
p-Block Elements (Groups 15–18) — this is one of the most content-heavy sections of the year. We cover oxides, hydrides, allotropes, anomalous behaviour of the first element, and the key compounds — all with trend-based teaching so students can answer unseen questions, not just recall practiced ones.
d- and f-Block Elements — electronic configurations, variable oxidation states, colour, magnetic properties, catalytic properties, and interstitial compounds. The f-block (lanthanoids and actinoids) is often rushed in school but carries direct board marks.
Coordination Compounds — nomenclature (IUPAC naming is frequently tested), bonding theories (VBT and CFT), isomerism (geometrical, optical, ionisation, linkage), and colour and magnetic properties. This chapter needs careful attention because students often know the theory but make errors in application.
We don't follow a one-size-fits-all lesson plan. Every student who joins Edudrona gets a teaching structure built around where they currently are and where they need to be.
Here is what that typically looks like in practice:
Initial Assessment — Before the first regular class begins, your teacher has a short conversation to understand which topics you're comfortable with, where you've been losing marks, and what your target score or exam is. This takes 20–30 minutes and shapes the entire study plan.
Chapter-wise Teaching with Concept Checks — Each chapter is taught one concept at a time, with short checks at the end of every concept to confirm understanding before moving on. If something hasn't clicked, the teacher revisits it using a different explanation or example rather than marking it as "covered" and moving forward.
Integrated Numerical Practice — For chapters with numerical content (Electrochemistry, Solutions, Kinetics, Solid State), we don't separate theory and problem-solving into different sessions. Numbers are introduced alongside the concept they belong to, so students see immediately how the theory translates into exam questions.
Named Reaction and Conversion Drills — For Organic Chemistry, we run periodic drills on named reactions, conditions, and conversions. These are practiced in the way they appear in exams — as questions, not as a list to read.
Weekly Chapter Tests — After every chapter is completed, we run a short test (usually 15–20 questions) covering all the key concepts, before moving on. This isn't optional homework — it's part of the session. It tells both the student and the teacher what has actually been retained.
Previous Year Question Practice — We regularly work through previous year CBSE and ICSE board questions, as well as NEET and JEE questions for students targeting those exams. This is more than just practice — it trains students to understand what examiners are actually asking and how to phrase answers correctly.
Revision Scheduling Before Boards — In the final 8–10 weeks before the board exam, the focus shifts from new learning to structured revision. We prioritise high-weight chapters, commonly missed questions, and full paper practice.
Edudrona's class 12 chemistry tuition online works well for a specific type of student — and it's worth being clear about that.
Students who are scoring below 70 and want to cross 85+ — This is the most common profile we work with. The gap between 65 and 85 in Chemistry is almost always about clarity on key chapters, not effort. Three to four months of focused 1-on-1 teaching makes a measurable difference here.
Students who are strong in some areas but have clear weak chapters — Maybe Physical Chemistry is fine but Organic is a disaster. Or boards are manageable but Coordination Compounds just won't stay in memory. We can run targeted classes focused entirely on the weak areas.
NEET aspirants who need board + competitive exam coverage together — Our teachers can integrate NEET-level Organic Chemistry problem-solving into regular board-focused classes, so you're not running two separate preparations.
Students who missed a chunk of Class 11 Chemistry — Class 12 Chemistry builds on Class 11 concepts in some chapters (especially Organic mechanisms and Physical Chemistry thermodynamics foundations). If there are gaps from Class 11, your teacher can address them without having to restart everything from scratch.
Students who want consistency — One of the most common complaints students have about coaching centres is irregular teachers and changing schedules. At Edudrona, our online tuition classes run on days and times you choose, with the same teacher every session.
A lot of students (and parents) ask what an online chemistry class actually feels like before they book a demo. Here's a straightforward picture of a standard 60-minute session.
The class opens with a 5–8 minute recap of the previous session. The teacher asks a few questions from the last topic — not as a test, but to check what's retained before building on it. If something from the last class didn't stick, it gets a quick re-explanation before the new content begins.
The main teaching portion takes up roughly 35–40 minutes. The teacher explains the new concept while writing on an online digital whiteboard — this means reaction mechanisms, structural formulas, energy diagrams, and equations are all drawn out in real time, the same way a good teacher would on a physical board. You can ask questions at any point. The class doesn't move forward until you're clear.
The last 10–15 minutes are for practice. The teacher gives you 2–3 questions on the day's topic and you work through them on screen. Where you get stuck, the teacher talks you through the reasoning — not just the answer.
Sessions are recorded. If you want to go back and re-watch a mechanism explanation or a particular step in a numerical solution, it's available to you.
Between sessions, your teacher will share notes (usually a concise summary of what was covered, key reaction conditions, or formula sheets) via WhatsApp or email. These are tailored to what was actually taught in your class, not a generic PDF.
This is worth addressing directly because a lot of families are weighing both options.
In a batch coaching class — whether offline or online — the teacher is managing 30, 50, or sometimes 200 students at once. They set the pace for the batch, not for your child. If your child has understood something quickly, they wait. If they haven't understood something, the class moves on. Doubt sessions are scheduled separately, often at inconvenient times, and by then the moment of confusion has passed.
In a 1-on-1 class, the teacher's only job for that hour is to make sure you understood the day's content. There's no batch to manage, no other student's confusion to address, no pressure to get through a certain number of slides before the session ends. The teacher knows exactly where you are because they were there with you in the last session.
The results of this kind of focused teaching tend to show up in two ways: students understand the subject more clearly (which builds confidence), and they make fewer careless errors in exams (because they actually understand what they're doing, not just what steps to follow).
That said, 1-on-1 tuition isn't magic. It requires the student to show up consistently, ask questions when something isn't clear, and do the practice assigned between sessions. The results are real, but they come from regular engagement — not from a single demo class.
Ideally in June or July, at the beginning of the academic year. This gives enough time to cover the full syllabus properly, practice previous year questions, and still have 6–8 weeks of revision before boards. That said, students who join in October or November can still make significant progress — the study plan just has to be more focused on high-weight chapters.
Yes, the demo is completely free. No credit card, no obligation. During the demo, your teacher will understand your current level, explain how they would approach the syllabus with you, and teach a short portion of a chapter so you can see the teaching style in action. After the demo, you decide whether to continue — there's no pressure either way.
Yes. We cover CBSE, ICSE, and most State Boards. The syllabus varies slightly between boards (ICSE covers a few additional topics in Organic Chemistry, for example), and your teacher will align the sessions to your specific exam.
Most students benefit from 3 classes per week — typically two sessions for new content and one for revision, tests, or numerical practice. If you're joining late in the year and need to cover a lot of ground quickly, 4–5 sessions per week is manageable. Your teacher will suggest what makes sense based on where you are in the syllabus.
Yes. For NEET aspirants specifically, Organic Chemistry and Inorganic Chemistry from Class 12 boards overlap significantly with NEET requirements. Your teacher can integrate NEET-level problem-solving into regular sessions. For JEE, Physical Chemistry (especially Electrochemistry and Kinetics) and Organic mechanisms are high-value areas we cover at the required depth.
You can request a teacher change at any time, for any reason. It's free, it's immediate, and there's no complicated process. Finding the right teaching fit matters, and we don't make that difficult.
Yes. Every session is recorded and available to the student. This is useful for revision before exams and for revisiting topics that were covered weeks earlier.
You give us advance notice and we reschedule. There's no penalty and the class is not forfeited.
A laptop or tablet with a stable internet connection. Classes are conducted over standard video platforms. The teacher uses an online interactive whiteboard for diagrams, structures, equations, and reaction mechanisms — which makes the sessions significantly clearer than a PowerPoint presentation.
This varies. Students with consistent attendance and active participation typically notice a difference in 6–8 weeks — more confidence in class, fewer blank spots in topic-wise tests. The score improvement shows up in the next school test or term exam. Students who join at the beginning of the year and stay consistent through boards have historically seen score improvements of 15–25 marks.
If you've been looking for class 12 online chemistry tuition that goes beyond slide decks and recorded videos, this is worth trying. The demo class is completely free — no credit card, no trial period, no awkward sales call after.
Fill in your details, tell us your board, your current level, and what's giving you trouble. We'll match you with a chemistry teacher, schedule the demo at a time that works for you, and let the class speak for itself.
Takes 2 minutes to fill in. No obligation to continue.