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How must life adapt to exist on other planets?

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title of IC: How must life adapt to exist on other planets? author: Elaine Skaggs teacher: Elaine Skaggs school: Upland High School course/grade: Biology grades 9 ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: How must life adapt to exist on other planets?


1
title of IC
  • How must life adapt to exist on other planets?

author Elaine Skaggs
2
teacher Elaine Skaggs
district Upland Unified School District
school Upland High School
course/grade Biology grades 9 - 12
email elaine_skaggs_at_upland.k12.ca.us
3
generative question
  • Could life exist on other planets or moons in our
    solar system, knowing the extreme abiotic factors
    to which they would have to adapt?

4
learning objectives (key standards)
  • Biology
  • 1. The fundamental life processes of plants
    and animals depend on a variety of chemical
    reactions that occur in specialized areas of the
    organisms cells.
  • 6. Stability in an ecosystem is a balance between
    competing effects.
  • 7 .The frequency of an allele in a gene pool of
    a population depends on many factors and may be
    stable or unstable over time.
  • Investigation Experimentation
  • 1. Scientific progress is made by asking
    meaningful questions and conducting careful
    investigations. AS a basis for understanding
    this concept, students should develop their own
    questions and perform investigations

5
assessment overview
  • Formative assessments
  • Pod cast of Lab safety rules
  • T-chart - qualitative and quantitative
    observations
  • KWL chart -Characteristics of Life
  • Venn diagram Prokaryotes vs Eukaryotes
  • Carousel reading of Extremophiles , write facts,
    share with rotating groups of students
  • 5-3-1 chart - How do abiotic factors affect
    life?
  • Summative assessments
  • Chapter generated test Prentice Hall Biology
    Authors Miller and Levine

6
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7
culminating project
  • Students will choose a planet or moon in our
    solar system and create an organism that would
    survive the extreme abiotic factors on that
    celestial body.
  • Research must include
  • Review of 3 peer-review scientific journals
  • Report must include
  • Pictures written description of your planet
  • pH, pressure, gravity, temperature, salinity,
    radiation, light,
  • Could your planet or moon support a water-base
    or methane -base life form? What adaptations
    would be required for survival?
  • What about food? Primary producers vs
    heterotropes?
  • Build a model of your organism or ecosystem?

8
key lessons activities
  • Thinking like a scientist - Scientific
    observations D Gilberts chemical lab
  • Characteristics of Life - Sand, Yeast, Fizzy
    Lab, Colormetric lab and Extremophile activity
  • Chemistry of Life Properties of Water Carbon
    Compounds polymer lab
  • Chemical reactions and enzymes Catalase Enzyme
    lab
  • How do abiotic factors affect life pH lab,
    pressure lab, temperature lab, light and
    radiation 5-3-1 activity
  • What is ecology? Energy flow activity
  • Role of climate greenhouse effect
  • What shapes our ecosystems? abiotic and biotic
    factors mapping temperatures outside on campus
    , lawn, artificial turf, cleared soil,
    concrete
  • Student project

9
5E inquiry activities
  • ENGAGE
  • Samples of Living verses Non-Living
  • Plastic snail/live snail more
  • Observe record
  •  EXPLORE
  • Participants make observations of 3 test tubes
    hand lenses touch, smell, listen
  • 1 Sand
  • 2 Yeast
  • 3 Crushed Alka-seltzer
  • Add sugar (food source) record
  • Add warm water record discuss
  • Add more sugar Add more water
  • EXPLAIN
  • How can you tell if something is living?
  • What are the characteristics of life?
  • Graphic organizer
  • EXTEND
  • What requirements are necessary for basic
    survival and which add to the quality of life of
    the living thing?
  • EVALUATE 
  • Students write, draw, or sing(rap) what living
    organisms need to survive?

10
  • ENGAGE
  • Pond water on LCD projector
  • What are the requirements that many of these
    living organisms have in common?
  • How are their needs different from ours?
  • Think-Pair-share
  • EXPLORE
  • Are microbes alive?
  • Students observe mold growing on potatoes, and
    then look at magnified images of several
    different microbes.
  • What did you observe? Color shapes?
  • EXPLAIN
  • How could you get a closer look at microbes?
    What tools do you need?
  • How can you tell if something is living?
  • What are the characteristics of life?
  • Graphic organizer
  • EXTEND
  • What requirements are necessary for basic
    survival and which add to the quality of life of
    the living thing?
  • EVALUATE
  • Students write, draw, or sing(rap) what living
    organisms need to survive?

11
  • integrated pedagogy
  • Making labs more open-ended
  • Backwards mapping
  • Thinking maps
  • Academic vocabulary tier 1 3
  • Collaboration with mod-severe special education
    class

12
  • NASA resources
  • http//www.microbe.org/microbes/mysteries.asp
  • http//www.microbeworld.org/htm/aboutmicro/
  • gallery/gallery_start.htm
  • http//www.cellsalive.com/cam2.htm
  • www.amnh.org/exhibitions/halltour/
  • http//teachspacescience.org/graphics/pdf/10000406
    .pdf
  • http//microscope.mbl.edu
  • http//resourcecommittee.house.gov/subcommittees/e
    mr/usgsweb/

13
  • 21st Century Skills
  • Effective communicator - oral reports
  • Information Literacy Research
  • Collaboration students will tutor severe to
    moderate special education students
  • Initiative and Self-driven

14
  • Miscellaneous (optional)
  • Website for Elaine Skaggs
  • www.uplandhigh.schoolloop.com
  • Click on schoolloop
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