Title: Co-Requisite
1Co-Requisite Content Standard SB3Students will
derive the relationship between single-celled and
multi-celled organisms and the increasing
complexity of systems. a. Relate the complexity
and organization of organisms to their ability
for obtaining, transforming, transporting,
releasing, and eliminating the matter and energy
used to sustain the organism.
2Comparative Anatomy
- What a queer, funny, little bird a frog are.
- When he sit, he squat most.
- When he jump, he hop most.
- And he aint got no tail at all, hardly most.
3BIG IDEAS
- Cellular Organization/ Specialization
- Adaptations
- Energy and Matter Transformation
- Cellular and Bulk Transport
- Metabolic Processes
- Growth, Development and Reproduction
- ETC.
4Essential Questions
- How does multicellularity develop in embryos?
- Why do some organisms eat and others dont?
- How does an organism change stored energy into
usable energy? - How are organisms adapted to (transport,
metabolize, excrete, etc.) matter and energy? - Since all organisms perform similar processes,
what might you expect about the stuff of which
they are made? - ETC.
5Enduring Understandings
- The student will understand that some organisms
consume complex organic compounds, and others
have the ability to organize these compounds from
inorganic materials using solar or chemical
energy. - The student will understand that very small
organisms perform some functions seen in larger,
more complex organisms. - The student will understand that all organisms
carry out metabolic activities within their cells
to transform energy into the chemical energy
of ATP. - The student will understand that all organisms
develop through specialization of structures,
with multicellular organisms forming specialized
tissues for specific functions.
6Students will know
- The developmental progress of multicellular
organisms due to specialization of cells. - The relationships and differences between
autotrophic and heterotrophic. - The Chemical and Mechanical processes of
(digestion, transport, absorption, storage,
excretion, etc.) - ETC.
7Students will be able to
- Design experiments to test problems derived from
careful observations. - Demonstrate appropriate technique in all
laboratory situations. - Collect, organize, and graph data to show results
of their experimental design. - Write lab reports with an introduction of
important concepts, a hypothesis, procedure,
organized results, and a conclusion that
evaluates the results in terms of the important
concepts. - Use data as evidence to support scientific
arguments and claims in written or oral
presentations.
8UNIT DESIGN - EXCRETION Big Ideas
- Cellular and Bulk Transport
- The ExcretoryStructure- Simple to complex
- Small organisms to large organisms Comparative
anatomy - The Process of Excretion
9Essential Questions - Excretion
- Why is diffusion and osmosis the only processes
of excretion needed by many organisms? - What is the relationship between metabolism and
excretion? - How is excretion accomplished in small and large,
multicellular organisms? - Why is an understanding of simple excretory
structures and functions important to
understanding complex structures?
10Skills -Students will be able to
- Analyze the chemical makeup of excretory waste
products. - Write a lab report to include a discussion of
concepts, a hypothesis, a report of procedures,
results that are organized, and a conclusion that
discusses the results in terms of the important
concepts.
11Knowledge - Students will know
- That the role of excretion in metabolism is to
remove the wastes given off during physiological
processes. - That diffusion, osmosis, and active transport are
involved in accomplishing excretion. - That the excretory structures are similar in all
multicellular organisms. - The sequence of filtration, reabsorption and
concentration accomplishes excretion of wastes in
complex organisms.
12Evidence of Understanding - Excretion
- Explain the role of excretion in metabolic
processes. - Compare and contrast the excretory functions of
unicellular and multicellular organisms. - Compare and contrast the excretory structures of
small, simple organisms and large, complex
organisms - Explain the processes of filtration,
reabsorption, and concentration of waste products
as they occur in the human kidney.
13Learning Activities - Excretion
- Large Group Discussion - Excretion
- Technology Virtual Urinalysis
http//www.gen.umn.edu/courses/1135/lab/urinalysis
lab/urinalysislab.htm - Small group activity Reading about and
analyzing role of urinalysis in society - Lab activity Analyzing synthetic urine
- Lab activity comparative anatomy Worm,
crayfish, pig - Graphic organizers diagrams, concept maps, etc.