QUESTION IMAGE
Question
lesson 1.1
- what is the difference between an observation and inference?
- give an example of an observation.
- given an example of an inference.
- what are the five characteristics of living things?
- how many of the characteristics listed above does something need to have in order to be considered living?
lesson 1.2
- what are the levels of multicellular organization in order from smallest to largest?
- how are prokaryotic cells different from eukaryotic cells?
- what is the function of the nucleus?
- what is the function of the cell membrane?
- what is the function of ribosomes?
- what is the function of mitochondria?
- be able to identify the nucleus, cell membrane, mitochondria, and ribosomes in an animal cell diagram.
lesson 1.3
- identify another organelle that was not listed in question #12.
lesson 1.4
- what is the function of the cell membrane?
- what molecules make up the cell membrane?
- which part of the phospholipids are hydrophilic and which part are hydrophobic? how does this influence the structure of the cell membrane?
- draw and label a diagram that shows the cell membrane and the different molecules that form it.
lesson 1.5
- what are the four types of macromolecules?
- what is the function of each type of macromolecule?
- what is the monomer and polymer of each macromolecule?
lesson 1.6
- how do we get the macromolecules we need from the food we eat?
lesson 1.7
- be able to identify the different parts of a cer.
- be able to write a cer in response to a question/prompt.
lesson 1.8
- should viruses be considered living? why or why not?
- be able to formulate a cer response when provided with data and other forms of evidence.
experimental design
- what is an independent variable? be able to identify one when given a scenario.
- what is a dependent variable? be able to identify one when given a scenario.
- what is a controlled variable? be able to identify one when given a scenario.
- what is a control group? why is it important?
- be able to write a hypothesis when given a scenario.
honors #1
- what is the function of the golgi apparatus, endoplasmic reticulum, vacuole, lysosome, vesicles, and cytoplasm in a cell?
- what organelles are involved in protein production and delivery? how?
- what would happen if certain organelles stopped functioning? give specific examples.
honors #2
- what is a counterclaim? what should you include in a counterclaim?
Brief Explanations
- Observation vs Inference: An observation is a direct perception using the senses, like seeing a plant grow. An inference is a conclusion based on observations, e.g., inferring a plant is healthy because it's growing well.
- Example of Observation: "I see the plant has grown taller" is an observation as it's a direct - sensed fact.
- Example of Inference: "The plant is healthy because it has grown taller" is an inference as it's a conclusion from the observation.
- Characteristics of Living Things: The five characteristics are organization (cells), metabolism (energy use), growth and development, response to stimuli, and reproduction.
- To be Considered Living: All five characteristics are generally required for something to be considered living.
- Levels of Multicellular Organization: Cells, tissues, organs, organ systems, organism.
- Prokaryotic vs Eukaryotic Cells: Prokaryotic cells lack a nucleus and membrane - bound organelles, while eukaryotic cells have a nucleus and such organelles.
- Function of Nucleus: Stores genetic information (DNA) and controls cell activities.
- Function of Cell Membrane: Regulates what enters and leaves the cell, provides protection and support.
- Function of Ribosomes: Synthesize proteins.
- Function of Mitochondria: Produce ATP (energy) through cellular respiration.
- Identification in Diagram: Requires visual identification skills of cell parts.
- Another Organelle: Golgi apparatus is an example not listed in #12. It modifies, sorts, and packages proteins and lipids.
- Function of Cell Membrane (repeated): As above, regulates transport and provides protection.
- Cell Membrane Molecules: Phospholipids make up the cell membrane.
- Phospholipid Hydrophilic/Hydrophobic: The head of a phospholipid is hydrophilic and the tail is hydrophobic. This creates a bilayer structure with the hydrophilic heads facing outward and the hydrophobic tails inward, which helps in the selective - permeability of the membrane.
- Cell Membrane Diagram: A diagram should show a phospholipid bilayer with embedded proteins, cholesterol, and carbohydrates.
- Four Types of Macromolecules: Carbohydrates, lipids, proteins, and nucleic acids.
- Function of Macromolecules: Carbohydrates provide energy, lipids store energy and are part of cell membranes, proteins have various functions like enzymes and structural support, and nucleic acids store and transmit genetic information.
- Monomer and Polymer of Macromolecules: Carbohydrates - monomer is monosaccharide, polymer is polysaccharide; Lipids - monomer is fatty acid and glycerol, polymer is triglyceride; Proteins - monomer is amino acid, polymer is polypeptide; Nucleic acids - monomer is nucleotide, polymer is nucleic acid.
- Getting Macromolecules from Food: Through the digestive system, which breaks down food into smaller molecules that can be absorbed and used to build macromolecules in the body.
22 - 23. CER (Claim - Evidence - Reasoning): CER is a framework for scientific argumentation. The claim is the answer to a question, evidence is data or facts, and reasoning explains how the evidence supports the claim.
- Viruses as Living: Viruses are not considered living because they lack some of the characteristics of living things, such as metabolism and cellular structure on their own.
- Formulating CER with Evidence: Involves using given data to support a claim and explain the reasoning.
- Independent Variable: The variable that is changed or…
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- Observation is direct - sensing, inference is conclusion from observation.
- I see a plant has grown new leaves.
- The plant is getting enough sunlight because it has grown new leaves.
- Organization, metabolism, growth and development, response to stimuli, reproduction.
- All five.
- Cells, tissues, organs, organ systems, organism.
- Prokaryotic cells lack nucleus and membrane - bound organelles; eukaryotic cells have them.
- Stores genetic information and controls cell activities.
- Regulates transport and provides protection.
- Synthesize proteins.
- Produce ATP.
- Requires visual identification.
- Golgi apparatus; modifies, sorts, and packages proteins and lipids.
- Regulates transport and provides protection.
- Phospholipids.
- Head is hydrophilic, tail is hydrophobic; creates bilayer for selective permeability.
- Phospholipid bilayer with embedded proteins, cholesterol, and carbohydrates.
- Carbohydrates, lipids, proteins, nucleic acids.
- Carbohydrates - energy; Lipids - energy storage and cell - membrane part; Proteins - various functions; Nucleic acids - genetic info storage/transmission.
- Carbohydrates: monomer - monosaccharide, polymer - polysaccharide; Lipids: monomer - fatty acid and glycerol, polymer - triglyceride; Proteins: monomer - amino acid, polymer - polypeptide; Nucleic acids: monomer - nucleotide, polymer - nucleic acid.
- Through the digestive system.
22 - 23. Claim is answer, evidence is data, reasoning explains evidence - claim link.
- No, lack metabolism and cellular structure on their own.
- Use given data for claim - evidence - reasoning.
- Variable that is changed or manipulated.
- Variable that is measured or observed and affected by independent variable.
- Variables kept the same.
- Group without treatment or at baseline; for comparison.
- A testable prediction about variable relationship.
- Golgi apparatus: modifies, sorts, packages; Endoplasmic reticulum: synthesizes proteins/lipids; Vacuole: stores materials; Lysosome: breaks down waste; Vesicles: transport materials; Cytoplasm: holds organelles, site of reactions.
- Ribosomes, endoplasmic reticulum, Golgi apparatus, vesicles.
- Waste accumulation if lysosomes stop; lack of energy if mitochondria stop.
- Opposing claim with evidence and reasoning.