Shiori nodded and opened her textbook while reading the printed sheet of paper she, and everyone else, was handed. "There are 60 problems regarding chemical reactions and the chemical equations for it. The point is to split up the work amongst ourselves and turn it in as an entire group for a both individual and group participation grades," she said, handing everyone else the worksheets. "Though, what is left to decide is who does what," she said, looking at everyone, seriously. "The best course of action would be to split up the work evenly, and all of us work simultaneously to work the most efficiently." ---- Yuusuke smiled when Azusa let him press his desk to hers, and would stand up, bringing his desk over to hers and placing the front of his desk to the front of hers, so they could both face each other without any unnecessary movement, and to avoid any mistaken touches. Yuusuke grinned and smiled when Azusa asked him about what they were doing. "Ah, well, the worksheet says to fill in the definitions, and then label the parts of the atoms. Then, there's an activity with matching the atomic structure to the correct element," he said, showing Azusa. When Kaori sat next to him and introduced herself, he smiled and said, "Hello, Mori-san." After, he looked at her tablet, seeing she really did have detailed notes of class from every class so far this week. She also had a really cute, and rather well done, picture on it as well. "That's a really nice picture, Kaori-san," he said with a sweet tone. "It reminds me of a children's story of how three little piglets built houses to protect themselves from a wolf, one of straw, one of sticks, and one of bricks, and the wolf went in that order, blowing them down until they all three went to the brick house and the wolf failed to blow it down." Yuusuke then realized he'd gotten off track of the work. "Anyways, Azusa-san, Kaori-san, sorry," he said, handing a worksheet to Kaori. "There's a front and a back, with definitions, part labeling, and matching, for atoms and elements. There's a periodic table in the back of the textbook that we can use," he said, opening his textbook to the very back, looking at the table of elements. "It'll be really useful for the last activity."