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Monday , September 10 th

Monday , September 10 th. Bell Ringer. Objective. SWBAT explain the role of biologists. Set up a sheet of notebook paper for Cornell Notes. Make sure to include: 1. Topic 2. Date 3. Objective 4. Summary Get out your essays to hand in. AGENDA. Bell Ringer Awards Take Cornell notes

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Monday , September 10 th

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  1. Monday, September 10th Bell Ringer Objective SWBAT explain the role of biologists. • Set up a sheet of notebook paper for Cornell Notes. Make sure to include: • 1. Topic • 2. Date • 3. Objective • 4. Summary • Get out your essays to hand in.

  2. AGENDA • Bell Ringer • Awards • Take Cornell notes • Reflection

  3. C.H.A.M.P.s • Conversation: Silence during lecture • Help: Raise your hand for help • Activity: Notes • Movement: You should remain in your seat unless you ask permission to move. • Participation: Take notes, participate in discussion and pay attention.

  4. What is Biology (Topic) What does biology have to do with me?

  5. Biology is the study of life. A key aspect of biology is simply learning about the different types of living things that surround you!

  6. We could not do it alone! • One of the general principals of biology is that living things do not exist in isolation. We are all dependent on each other. Remember the Lion King? We are all part of the circle of life!

  7. What Do Biologists Study? • Biologists study the way organisms interact. Since humans do not exist in isolation, it is important to study the life around us. This helps us to understand our place in the circle of life. • Biologists study problems and propose solutions. Advances in medicine, and the preservation of endangered organisms are some ways that biologists help preserve the diversity on our planet.

  8. Check For Understanding Which of the following are likely topics for a course in biology? 1. Why does the Texas horned lizard squirt blood out of its eyes? 2. How is a banded pipefish able to hide in its environment of seaweeds? 3. What chemicals cause plant stems to lengthen or flowers to bloom? 4. All of these.

  9. What Do Biologists Do With All The Data? • Biologists answers “What, Why, and How”, to almost anything that has to do with the world around us. Ex. How animals hunt, why certain plants grow in different climates, and what current problems humans are causing for the earth.

  10. Reflection In a 4 sentence reflection: • Summarize what biologists do • If you were a biologist, what would you like to study?

  11. Wednesday! Hump Day WoohWooh!Take out your notes from yesterday! Bell Ringer: Objective: SWBAT: Summarize the characteristics of life. • Describe why it is important that organisms reproduce? Do all living things reproduce?

  12. Agenda: • Bell Ringer • Announcements (your papers) • Lecture • Independent practice

  13. C.H.A.M.P.s • Conversation: Silence during lecture • Help: Raise your hand for help • Activity: Notes • Movement: You should remain in your seat unless you ask permission to move. • Participation: Take notes, participate in discussion and pay attention.

  14. Is it dead or alive??????

  15. What Are The Five Characteristics of Life? • Living things are organized • Living things make more living things (reproduce) • Living things change during their lives • Living things adjust to their surroundings • Living things adapt and evolve

  16. What does it mean to “Be Organized” • All living things show an orderly structure, or organization. • The living world is composed of cells that work together in an orderly, living system. • Whether an organism is composed of one, or ten million cells, they are structured and organized to work together and help that organism carry out function to maintain its life.

  17. Think, Pair, Share • Think for 30 seconds why it is important that organisms reproduce • Share with your partner for 30 seconds • Be prepared to share

  18. Why Is It Important For Living Things to Reproduce? • All living things are capable of reproduction, or the ability to produce offspring. • Reproduction is not essential for the survival of an individual organism, but rather for the survival of the SPECIES (a group of organisms that can interbreed and produce fertile offspring in nature)

  19. How Do Living Things Change Throughout Their Lives • A living thing must have the ability to grow. • Growth results in an increase in the amount of living material and the formation of new structures. (Are you the same size today that you were the day you were born?) • Even organisms that are unicellular (one cell) grow, although you may not notice the change. • All the changes that take place in an organism during their life is known as DEVELOPMENT.

  20. How Do Living Things Adjust to Their Environment? • Organisms live in a constant interface with their surroundings or ENVIRONMENT. • Anything in the environment that causes an organism to react is a STIMULUS. • The reaction to the stimulus is known as a RESPONSE. • The ability of an organism to respond to a stimulus is vital for that organisms survival.

  21. How Do Living Things Adapt and Evolve • Any inherited structure, behavior, or internal process that enables an organism to respond to environmental factors and live to produce offspring is called an ADAPTATION. • Adaptations are inherited from previous generations. • As the environment changes over generations, new adaptations are formed and the organism passes these new adaptations down to their offspring to increase the rate of survival.

  22. C.H.A.M.P.s • Conversation:Soft voices to help each other • Help: Raise your hand for help • Activity:Independent Practice • Movement: You should remain in your seat unless you ask permission to move. • Participation:Actively work on your assignment

  23. Directions: • One person from each table, grab enough books for your table. • Open your book to page 10. • Complete numbers 1-4. • You must write the question for credit. • Due at the end of class.

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