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Chapter 1 Introduction: Biology Today 0
We are living in a golden age of biology. Biology provides exciting breakthroughs changing our culture. Genetics  and  cell biology  are revolutionizing medicine and agriculture Molecular biology  is solving crimes and revealing ancestries. Ecology  helps us address environmental issues. Neuroscience  and  evolutionary biology  are reshaping psychology and sociology. Biology and Society: Biology All Around Us
 
Biology  is the scientific study of life. How does “life” differ from “non-life”? Where does “life” start? What is “nature”? The Properties of Life
1)  Order  – complex but ordered organization 2)  Regulation  – outside environment may change, but organism can regulate inner environment -  Homeostasis The Seven Properties of Life
3)  Growth & Development  – DNA controls pattern of growth and development - Every organism arises  through reproduction - Inheritance transmits DNA  from parents to offspring 4)  Energy Utilization  – take in energy and use it to perform all of life’s activities The Seven Properties of Life
5)  Response to the Environment  – all organisms respond to environmental stimuli 6)  Reproduction  – organisms reproduce their own kind The Seven Properties of Life
7)  Evolution  – populations evolve (change) over time - Evolution is the central, unifying feature of  life since life arose nearly 4 billion years ago The Seven Properties of Life
Seahorse Camouflage
Biologists explore life at levels ranging from the biosphere to the molecules that make up cells.  “Life” emerges at the level of  cells A cell is the smallest unit that can live and reproduce on its own (perform all properties of life) All organisms consist of one or more cells Life is more than a sum of its parts, it is an emergent property Life at Its Many Levels
Biosphere Ecosystems Communities Populations Biosphere Ecosystems Communities Populations Organisms Organ Systems and Organs Tissues Biosphere Ecosystems Communities Populations Organisms Organ Systems and Organs Tissues Cells Organelles Molecules and Atoms Atom Nucleus
 
 
Ecosystems Each organism interacts continuously with living and nonliving factors in its environment. The interactions between organisms and their environment take place within an  ecosystem . The dynamics of any ecosystem depend on two main processes: Cycling of nutrients One-way flow of energy
Energy and Nutrients All organisms require energy and nutrients to sustain their organization and activities Nutrients  – required for growth and survival Producers  – make their own food; get energy from sun Consumers  – obtain energy and nutrients by eating other organisms Decomposers  – consumers (bacteria, fungi) that recycle complex molecules
Inflow of light energy Chemical energy  food  Cycling of nutrients Consumers  animals  Producers  plants and other photosynthetic organisms  Decomposers  in soil  Loss of heat energy ECOSYSTEM Nutrients are cycled One-way flow of energy
If So Much Unity, Why So Many Species? All organisms Made from same materials Function on same laws of energy Have same properties of life Diversity  is the hallmark of life The diversity of known life includes 1.8 million species. Estimates of the total diversity range from 10 million to over 100 million species.
Grouping Species: The Basic Concept Biodiversity can be beautiful but overwhelming. Species  – One kind of organism Two part name –  Genus species Ex.  Homo sapiens
The Three Domains of Life The three domains of life are: Bacteria  – single-celled, prokaryotes (no nucleus), most ancient Archaea  – single-celled, prokaryotes Eukarya  – eukaryotes (with a nucleus), single- and multi-celled DOMAIN BACTERIA DOMAIN ARCHAEA
Eukarya  includes Kingdom  Plantae Kingdom  Fungi Kingdom  Animalia Protists  (single-celled) DOMAIN EUKARYA Kingdom Plantae Kingdom Fungi Kingdom Animalia Protists   multiple kingdoms 
Unity in the Diversity of Life How can organisms be so much alike and still show tremendous diversity? Underlying the diversity of life is a striking unity, especially at the lower levels of structure. For example, all life uses the genetic language of  DNA . Changes in DNA ( mutations ) which are inherited from parents give rise to diversity Biological  evolution  accounts for this combination of unity and diversity.
EVOLUTION: BIOLOGY’S UNIFYING THEME Mutations give rise to different forms of traits Some trait forms are more adaptive than others Those that have them are more likely to survive and reproduce in their environment Over generations, adaptive forms of traits tend to become common in a population Less adaptive forms of the same traits become less common or lost
Evolution Evolution  is heritable change which occurs in a line of descent over time Populations  evolve…not individuals! Traits that help characterize a population (and a species) can change over generations Each species is one twig of a branching tree of life extending back over 3 billion years. Species that are very similar, such as brown bears and polar bears, share a more recent common ancestor.
Ancestral bear Common ancestor of polar bear and brown bear Giant panda Spectacled bear Sloth bear Sun bear American black bear Asiatic black bear Polar bear Brown bear 30 25 20 15 10 5 Millions of years ago
Evolution via Selection Natural Selection Natural populations Differential survival and reproduction among individuals that vary in one or more heritable traits Artificial Selection Captive populations Traits selected are not necessarily adaptive rock pigeon
Observing Natural Selection Population with varied inherited traits Elimination of individuals with certain traits
Observing Natural Selection Reproduction of survivors Increasing frequency of traits that enhance survival and reproductive success Reproduction of survivors
Observing Artificial Selection Domesticated dogs descended from wolves Domesticated dogs Gray wolves
THE PROCESS OF SCIENCE The word  science  is derived from a Latin verb meaning “to know.” Science is a way of looking at the  natural world Minimize bias in judgments Focus on testable ideas about observable aspects of nature
Scope and Limits of Science Limit science to only that which is  observable in nature Allows us to be objective, not subjective Science does not address the supernatural or anything beyond nature
How Science Works The Scientific Method Observe  something in nature Form  hypothesis  (testable assumption) about it Make  predictions  about what might occur of the hypothesis is  not  wrong Test  predictions by  observations  or  experiments Repeat  for consistency Report  tests and conclusions
Experiments Tests used to support or falsify a prediction Variable group  – characteristic is measured and changed Control group  – characteristics do not change Experiments focus on cause, effect, or function of  one variable  at a time Minimizes bias and controls potential bias in results
Observation: My flashlight doesn’t work. Question: What’s wrong with my flashlight? Hypothesis: The flashlight’s batteries are dead. Prediction: If I replace the batteries, the flashlight will work.
Observation: My flashlight doesn’t work. Question: What’s wrong with my flashlight? Prediction: If I replace the batteries, the flashlight will work. Experiment: I replace the batteries with new ones. Experiment supports hypothesis; make additional predictions and test them. Hypothesis: The flashlight’s batteries are dead.
Observation: My flashlight doesn’t work. Question: What’s wrong with my flashlight? Prediction: If I replace the batteries, the flashlight will work. Experiment: I replace the batteries with new ones. Experiment supports hypothesis; make additional predictions and test them. Experiment does not support hypothesis; revise hypothesis or pose new one. Revise Hypothesis: The flashlight’s batteries are dead.
Hypothesis Olestra® causes intestinal cramps. Prediction People who eat potato chips made with Olestra will be more likely to get intestinal cramps than those who eat potato chips made without Olestra. Experiment Control Group Experimental Group Percentages are about equal. People who eat potato chips made with Olestra are just as likely to get intestinal cramps as those who eat potato chips made without Olestra. These results do not support the hypothesis. Conclusion Eats regular potato chips Eats Olestra potato chips 93 of 529 people get cramps later (17.6%) 89 of 563 people get cramps later (15.8%) Results
Sampling Error in Experiments Small sample size increases the likelihood of sampling error in experiments In such cases, a subset may be tested that is not representative of the whole Larger sample size and repetition can reduce sampling error
30% green 70% black Out of 50: 10 (20%) green, 40 (80%) black
Theories in Science What is a scientific theory, and how is it different from a hypothesis? A  theory  is a set of well-tested hypotheses that explain some aspect of the  natural world Explains a broad range of observations (each hypothesis is narrow) NOT the absolute truth ; can only be relatively certain that it is or is not correct (ex: gravity) Opinion and belief are NOT scientific theory Science and religion are two very different ways of trying to make sense of nature
Evolution Connection: Evolution in Our Everyday Lives Antibiotics are drugs that help fight bacterial infections. When an antibiotic is taken, most bacteria are typically killed. Those bacteria most naturally resistant to the drug can still survive. Those few resistant bacteria can soon multiply and become the norm and not the exception.
Those few resistant bacteria can soon multiply and become the norm and not the exception. The evolution of antibiotic-resistant bacteria is a huge problem in public health. Antibiotics are being used more selectively. Many farmers are reducing the use of antibiotics in animal feed.

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121 ch1 introduction

  • 1. Chapter 1 Introduction: Biology Today 0
  • 2. We are living in a golden age of biology. Biology provides exciting breakthroughs changing our culture. Genetics and cell biology are revolutionizing medicine and agriculture Molecular biology is solving crimes and revealing ancestries. Ecology helps us address environmental issues. Neuroscience and evolutionary biology are reshaping psychology and sociology. Biology and Society: Biology All Around Us
  • 3.  
  • 4. Biology is the scientific study of life. How does “life” differ from “non-life”? Where does “life” start? What is “nature”? The Properties of Life
  • 5. 1) Order – complex but ordered organization 2) Regulation – outside environment may change, but organism can regulate inner environment - Homeostasis The Seven Properties of Life
  • 6. 3) Growth & Development – DNA controls pattern of growth and development - Every organism arises through reproduction - Inheritance transmits DNA from parents to offspring 4) Energy Utilization – take in energy and use it to perform all of life’s activities The Seven Properties of Life
  • 7. 5) Response to the Environment – all organisms respond to environmental stimuli 6) Reproduction – organisms reproduce their own kind The Seven Properties of Life
  • 8. 7) Evolution – populations evolve (change) over time - Evolution is the central, unifying feature of life since life arose nearly 4 billion years ago The Seven Properties of Life
  • 10. Biologists explore life at levels ranging from the biosphere to the molecules that make up cells. “Life” emerges at the level of cells A cell is the smallest unit that can live and reproduce on its own (perform all properties of life) All organisms consist of one or more cells Life is more than a sum of its parts, it is an emergent property Life at Its Many Levels
  • 11. Biosphere Ecosystems Communities Populations Biosphere Ecosystems Communities Populations Organisms Organ Systems and Organs Tissues Biosphere Ecosystems Communities Populations Organisms Organ Systems and Organs Tissues Cells Organelles Molecules and Atoms Atom Nucleus
  • 12.  
  • 13.  
  • 14. Ecosystems Each organism interacts continuously with living and nonliving factors in its environment. The interactions between organisms and their environment take place within an ecosystem . The dynamics of any ecosystem depend on two main processes: Cycling of nutrients One-way flow of energy
  • 15. Energy and Nutrients All organisms require energy and nutrients to sustain their organization and activities Nutrients – required for growth and survival Producers – make their own food; get energy from sun Consumers – obtain energy and nutrients by eating other organisms Decomposers – consumers (bacteria, fungi) that recycle complex molecules
  • 16. Inflow of light energy Chemical energy  food  Cycling of nutrients Consumers  animals  Producers  plants and other photosynthetic organisms  Decomposers  in soil  Loss of heat energy ECOSYSTEM Nutrients are cycled One-way flow of energy
  • 17. If So Much Unity, Why So Many Species? All organisms Made from same materials Function on same laws of energy Have same properties of life Diversity is the hallmark of life The diversity of known life includes 1.8 million species. Estimates of the total diversity range from 10 million to over 100 million species.
  • 18. Grouping Species: The Basic Concept Biodiversity can be beautiful but overwhelming. Species – One kind of organism Two part name – Genus species Ex. Homo sapiens
  • 19. The Three Domains of Life The three domains of life are: Bacteria – single-celled, prokaryotes (no nucleus), most ancient Archaea – single-celled, prokaryotes Eukarya – eukaryotes (with a nucleus), single- and multi-celled DOMAIN BACTERIA DOMAIN ARCHAEA
  • 20. Eukarya includes Kingdom Plantae Kingdom Fungi Kingdom Animalia Protists (single-celled) DOMAIN EUKARYA Kingdom Plantae Kingdom Fungi Kingdom Animalia Protists  multiple kingdoms 
  • 21. Unity in the Diversity of Life How can organisms be so much alike and still show tremendous diversity? Underlying the diversity of life is a striking unity, especially at the lower levels of structure. For example, all life uses the genetic language of DNA . Changes in DNA ( mutations ) which are inherited from parents give rise to diversity Biological evolution accounts for this combination of unity and diversity.
  • 22. EVOLUTION: BIOLOGY’S UNIFYING THEME Mutations give rise to different forms of traits Some trait forms are more adaptive than others Those that have them are more likely to survive and reproduce in their environment Over generations, adaptive forms of traits tend to become common in a population Less adaptive forms of the same traits become less common or lost
  • 23. Evolution Evolution is heritable change which occurs in a line of descent over time Populations evolve…not individuals! Traits that help characterize a population (and a species) can change over generations Each species is one twig of a branching tree of life extending back over 3 billion years. Species that are very similar, such as brown bears and polar bears, share a more recent common ancestor.
  • 24. Ancestral bear Common ancestor of polar bear and brown bear Giant panda Spectacled bear Sloth bear Sun bear American black bear Asiatic black bear Polar bear Brown bear 30 25 20 15 10 5 Millions of years ago
  • 25. Evolution via Selection Natural Selection Natural populations Differential survival and reproduction among individuals that vary in one or more heritable traits Artificial Selection Captive populations Traits selected are not necessarily adaptive rock pigeon
  • 26. Observing Natural Selection Population with varied inherited traits Elimination of individuals with certain traits
  • 27. Observing Natural Selection Reproduction of survivors Increasing frequency of traits that enhance survival and reproductive success Reproduction of survivors
  • 28. Observing Artificial Selection Domesticated dogs descended from wolves Domesticated dogs Gray wolves
  • 29. THE PROCESS OF SCIENCE The word science is derived from a Latin verb meaning “to know.” Science is a way of looking at the natural world Minimize bias in judgments Focus on testable ideas about observable aspects of nature
  • 30. Scope and Limits of Science Limit science to only that which is observable in nature Allows us to be objective, not subjective Science does not address the supernatural or anything beyond nature
  • 31. How Science Works The Scientific Method Observe something in nature Form hypothesis (testable assumption) about it Make predictions about what might occur of the hypothesis is not wrong Test predictions by observations or experiments Repeat for consistency Report tests and conclusions
  • 32. Experiments Tests used to support or falsify a prediction Variable group – characteristic is measured and changed Control group – characteristics do not change Experiments focus on cause, effect, or function of one variable at a time Minimizes bias and controls potential bias in results
  • 33. Observation: My flashlight doesn’t work. Question: What’s wrong with my flashlight? Hypothesis: The flashlight’s batteries are dead. Prediction: If I replace the batteries, the flashlight will work.
  • 34. Observation: My flashlight doesn’t work. Question: What’s wrong with my flashlight? Prediction: If I replace the batteries, the flashlight will work. Experiment: I replace the batteries with new ones. Experiment supports hypothesis; make additional predictions and test them. Hypothesis: The flashlight’s batteries are dead.
  • 35. Observation: My flashlight doesn’t work. Question: What’s wrong with my flashlight? Prediction: If I replace the batteries, the flashlight will work. Experiment: I replace the batteries with new ones. Experiment supports hypothesis; make additional predictions and test them. Experiment does not support hypothesis; revise hypothesis or pose new one. Revise Hypothesis: The flashlight’s batteries are dead.
  • 36. Hypothesis Olestra® causes intestinal cramps. Prediction People who eat potato chips made with Olestra will be more likely to get intestinal cramps than those who eat potato chips made without Olestra. Experiment Control Group Experimental Group Percentages are about equal. People who eat potato chips made with Olestra are just as likely to get intestinal cramps as those who eat potato chips made without Olestra. These results do not support the hypothesis. Conclusion Eats regular potato chips Eats Olestra potato chips 93 of 529 people get cramps later (17.6%) 89 of 563 people get cramps later (15.8%) Results
  • 37. Sampling Error in Experiments Small sample size increases the likelihood of sampling error in experiments In such cases, a subset may be tested that is not representative of the whole Larger sample size and repetition can reduce sampling error
  • 38. 30% green 70% black Out of 50: 10 (20%) green, 40 (80%) black
  • 39. Theories in Science What is a scientific theory, and how is it different from a hypothesis? A theory is a set of well-tested hypotheses that explain some aspect of the natural world Explains a broad range of observations (each hypothesis is narrow) NOT the absolute truth ; can only be relatively certain that it is or is not correct (ex: gravity) Opinion and belief are NOT scientific theory Science and religion are two very different ways of trying to make sense of nature
  • 40. Evolution Connection: Evolution in Our Everyday Lives Antibiotics are drugs that help fight bacterial infections. When an antibiotic is taken, most bacteria are typically killed. Those bacteria most naturally resistant to the drug can still survive. Those few resistant bacteria can soon multiply and become the norm and not the exception.
  • 41. Those few resistant bacteria can soon multiply and become the norm and not the exception. The evolution of antibiotic-resistant bacteria is a huge problem in public health. Antibiotics are being used more selectively. Many farmers are reducing the use of antibiotics in animal feed.

Editor's Notes

  • #4: Figure 1.0 Biology is everywhere!
  • #5: Student Misconceptions and Concerns 1. Many students enter our courses with a limited appreciation of the diversity of life. Ask any group of freshmen at the start of the semester to write down the first type of animal that comes to mind, and the most frequent response is a mammal. (In my courses, over a 21-year period, more than 98% of the examples have been mammals.) As the diversity of life is explored, the common heritage of biological organization can be less, and not more, apparent. The diverse forms, habits, and ecological interactions overwhelm our senses with differences. Emphasizing the diversity and unifying aspects of life is necessary for a greater understanding of the evolutionary history of life on Earth. 2. We live in a world that is largely understood by what we can distinguish and identify with our naked senses. However, the diversity of life and the levels of biological organization extend well below the physical scale of our daily lives. For many students, appreciating the diversity of the microscopic world is abstract, nearly on par with an understanding of the workings of atoms and molecules. A laboratory opportunity to examine the microscopic details of objects from our daily lives (the surface of potato chips, the structure of table salt and sugar, the details of a blade of grass) can be an important sensory extension that prepares the mind for greater comprehension of these minute biological details. Teaching Tips 1. Consider asking students to bring to class a page or two of some article about biology that appeared in the media in the last month. Alternatively, you could have each student email a Web address of a recent biology-related news event to you. You might even have them e-mail relevant articles to you for each of the main topics you address throughout the semester. 2. The scientific organization Sigma Xi offers a free e-mail summary of the major science news articles each weekday. The first paragraph or so of each article is included in the e-mail with a hyperlink to the source of the entire article. The topics are most diverse and can be an excellent way to be aware of daily scientific announcements and reports. Typically, about ten articles are cited in each weekday email. To sign up for this free service, go to (www.americanscientist.org/). 3. For a chance to add a little math to the biological levels of organization, consider calculating the general scale differences between each level of biological organization. For example, are cells generally 5, 10, 50, 100 times more massive than organelles? Are organelles generally 5, 10, 50, 100 times more massive than macromolecules? For some levels of organization, such as ecosystems, communities, and populations, size/scale differences are perhaps less relevant and more problematic to consider. However, at the smaller levels, the sense of scale might enhance an appreciation for levels of biological organization. 4. Help the class think through the diverse interactions between an organism and its environment. In class, select an organism and have the class develop a list of environmental components that interact with the organism. This list should include living and nonliving categories. 5. The U.S. Census Bureau maintains updated population clocks that estimate the United States and world populations (www.census.gov/main/www/popclock.html). If students have a general idea of the human population of the United States, statistics about the number of people affected with a disease or disaster become more significant. For example, the current population of the United States is more than 306,000,000 (2008). It is currently estimated that at least one million people in the United States are infected with HIV. The number of people infected with HIV is impressive and concerning, but not perhaps as meaningful as the realization that this represents one of at least every 300 people in the United States. Although the infected people are not evenly distributed amongst geographic and ethnic groups, if you apply this generality to the enrollments in your classes the students might better understand the tremendous impact of HIV infection. 6. The authors make an analogy between the four bases used to form genes and the 26 letters of the English alphabet used to create words and sentences. One could also make an analogy between the four bases and trains composed of four different types of railroad cars (perhaps an engine, boxcar, tanker, and flatcar). Imagine how many different types of trains one could make using just one hundred rail cars of four different types. (The answer is 4 100 .) 7. An excellent introduction to the domains and kingdoms of life is presented at (www.ucmp.berkeley.edu/exhibits/historyoflife.php).
  • #6: Student Misconceptions and Concerns 1. Many students enter our courses with a limited appreciation of the diversity of life. Ask any group of freshmen at the start of the semester to write down the first type of animal that comes to mind, and the most frequent response is a mammal. (In my courses, over a 21-year period, more than 98% of the examples have been mammals.) As the diversity of life is explored, the common heritage of biological organization can be less, and not more, apparent. The diverse forms, habits, and ecological interactions overwhelm our senses with differences. Emphasizing the diversity and unifying aspects of life is necessary for a greater understanding of the evolutionary history of life on Earth. 2. We live in a world that is largely understood by what we can distinguish and identify with our naked senses. However, the diversity of life and the levels of biological organization extend well below the physical scale of our daily lives. For many students, appreciating the diversity of the microscopic world is abstract, nearly on par with an understanding of the workings of atoms and molecules. A laboratory opportunity to examine the microscopic details of objects from our daily lives (the surface of potato chips, the structure of table salt and sugar, the details of a blade of grass) can be an important sensory extension that prepares the mind for greater comprehension of these minute biological details. Teaching Tips 1. Consider asking students to bring to class a page or two of some article about biology that appeared in the media in the last month. Alternatively, you could have each student email a Web address of a recent biology-related news event to you. You might even have them e-mail relevant articles to you for each of the main topics you address throughout the semester. 2. The scientific organization Sigma Xi offers a free e-mail summary of the major science news articles each weekday. The first paragraph or so of each article is included in the e-mail with a hyperlink to the source of the entire article. The topics are most diverse and can be an excellent way to be aware of daily scientific announcements and reports. Typically, about ten articles are cited in each weekday email. To sign up for this free service, go to (www.americanscientist.org/). 3. For a chance to add a little math to the biological levels of organization, consider calculating the general scale differences between each level of biological organization. For example, are cells generally 5, 10, 50, 100 times more massive than organelles? Are organelles generally 5, 10, 50, 100 times more massive than macromolecules? For some levels of organization, such as ecosystems, communities, and populations, size/scale differences are perhaps less relevant and more problematic to consider. However, at the smaller levels, the sense of scale might enhance an appreciation for levels of biological organization. 4. Help the class think through the diverse interactions between an organism and its environment. In class, select an organism and have the class develop a list of environmental components that interact with the organism. This list should include living and nonliving categories. 5. The U.S. Census Bureau maintains updated population clocks that estimate the United States and world populations (www.census.gov/main/www/popclock.html). If students have a general idea of the human population of the United States, statistics about the number of people affected with a disease or disaster become more significant. For example, the current population of the United States is more than 306,000,000 (2008). It is currently estimated that at least one million people in the United States are infected with HIV. The number of people infected with HIV is impressive and concerning, but not perhaps as meaningful as the realization that this represents one of at least every 300 people in the United States. Although the infected people are not evenly distributed amongst geographic and ethnic groups, if you apply this generality to the enrollments in your classes the students might better understand the tremendous impact of HIV infection. 6. The authors make an analogy between the four bases used to form genes and the 26 letters of the English alphabet used to create words and sentences. One could also make an analogy between the four bases and trains composed of four different types of railroad cars (perhaps an engine, boxcar, tanker, and flatcar). Imagine how many different types of trains one could make using just one hundred rail cars of four different types. (The answer is 4 100 .) 7. An excellent introduction to the domains and kingdoms of life is presented at (www.ucmp.berkeley.edu/exhibits/historyoflife.php).
  • #7: Student Misconceptions and Concerns 1. Many students enter our courses with a limited appreciation of the diversity of life. Ask any group of freshmen at the start of the semester to write down the first type of animal that comes to mind, and the most frequent response is a mammal. (In my courses, over a 21-year period, more than 98% of the examples have been mammals.) As the diversity of life is explored, the common heritage of biological organization can be less, and not more, apparent. The diverse forms, habits, and ecological interactions overwhelm our senses with differences. Emphasizing the diversity and unifying aspects of life is necessary for a greater understanding of the evolutionary history of life on Earth. 2. We live in a world that is largely understood by what we can distinguish and identify with our naked senses. However, the diversity of life and the levels of biological organization extend well below the physical scale of our daily lives. For many students, appreciating the diversity of the microscopic world is abstract, nearly on par with an understanding of the workings of atoms and molecules. A laboratory opportunity to examine the microscopic details of objects from our daily lives (the surface of potato chips, the structure of table salt and sugar, the details of a blade of grass) can be an important sensory extension that prepares the mind for greater comprehension of these minute biological details. Teaching Tips 1. Consider asking students to bring to class a page or two of some article about biology that appeared in the media in the last month. Alternatively, you could have each student email a Web address of a recent biology-related news event to you. You might even have them e-mail relevant articles to you for each of the main topics you address throughout the semester. 2. The scientific organization Sigma Xi offers a free e-mail summary of the major science news articles each weekday. The first paragraph or so of each article is included in the e-mail with a hyperlink to the source of the entire article. The topics are most diverse and can be an excellent way to be aware of daily scientific announcements and reports. Typically, about ten articles are cited in each weekday email. To sign up for this free service, go to (www.americanscientist.org/). 3. For a chance to add a little math to the biological levels of organization, consider calculating the general scale differences between each level of biological organization. For example, are cells generally 5, 10, 50, 100 times more massive than organelles? Are organelles generally 5, 10, 50, 100 times more massive than macromolecules? For some levels of organization, such as ecosystems, communities, and populations, size/scale differences are perhaps less relevant and more problematic to consider. However, at the smaller levels, the sense of scale might enhance an appreciation for levels of biological organization. 4. Help the class think through the diverse interactions between an organism and its environment. In class, select an organism and have the class develop a list of environmental components that interact with the organism. This list should include living and nonliving categories. 5. The U.S. Census Bureau maintains updated population clocks that estimate the United States and world populations (www.census.gov/main/www/popclock.html). If students have a general idea of the human population of the United States, statistics about the number of people affected with a disease or disaster become more significant. For example, the current population of the United States is more than 306,000,000 (2008). It is currently estimated that at least one million people in the United States are infected with HIV. The number of people infected with HIV is impressive and concerning, but not perhaps as meaningful as the realization that this represents one of at least every 300 people in the United States. Although the infected people are not evenly distributed amongst geographic and ethnic groups, if you apply this generality to the enrollments in your classes the students might better understand the tremendous impact of HIV infection. 6. The authors make an analogy between the four bases used to form genes and the 26 letters of the English alphabet used to create words and sentences. One could also make an analogy between the four bases and trains composed of four different types of railroad cars (perhaps an engine, boxcar, tanker, and flatcar). Imagine how many different types of trains one could make using just one hundred rail cars of four different types. (The answer is 4 100 .) 7. An excellent introduction to the domains and kingdoms of life is presented at (www.ucmp.berkeley.edu/exhibits/historyoflife.php).
  • #8: Student Misconceptions and Concerns 1. Many students enter our courses with a limited appreciation of the diversity of life. Ask any group of freshmen at the start of the semester to write down the first type of animal that comes to mind, and the most frequent response is a mammal. (In my courses, over a 21-year period, more than 98% of the examples have been mammals.) As the diversity of life is explored, the common heritage of biological organization can be less, and not more, apparent. The diverse forms, habits, and ecological interactions overwhelm our senses with differences. Emphasizing the diversity and unifying aspects of life is necessary for a greater understanding of the evolutionary history of life on Earth. 2. We live in a world that is largely understood by what we can distinguish and identify with our naked senses. However, the diversity of life and the levels of biological organization extend well below the physical scale of our daily lives. For many students, appreciating the diversity of the microscopic world is abstract, nearly on par with an understanding of the workings of atoms and molecules. A laboratory opportunity to examine the microscopic details of objects from our daily lives (the surface of potato chips, the structure of table salt and sugar, the details of a blade of grass) can be an important sensory extension that prepares the mind for greater comprehension of these minute biological details. Teaching Tips 1. Consider asking students to bring to class a page or two of some article about biology that appeared in the media in the last month. Alternatively, you could have each student email a Web address of a recent biology-related news event to you. You might even have them e-mail relevant articles to you for each of the main topics you address throughout the semester. 2. The scientific organization Sigma Xi offers a free e-mail summary of the major science news articles each weekday. The first paragraph or so of each article is included in the e-mail with a hyperlink to the source of the entire article. The topics are most diverse and can be an excellent way to be aware of daily scientific announcements and reports. Typically, about ten articles are cited in each weekday email. To sign up for this free service, go to (www.americanscientist.org/). 3. For a chance to add a little math to the biological levels of organization, consider calculating the general scale differences between each level of biological organization. For example, are cells generally 5, 10, 50, 100 times more massive than organelles? Are organelles generally 5, 10, 50, 100 times more massive than macromolecules? For some levels of organization, such as ecosystems, communities, and populations, size/scale differences are perhaps less relevant and more problematic to consider. However, at the smaller levels, the sense of scale might enhance an appreciation for levels of biological organization. 4. Help the class think through the diverse interactions between an organism and its environment. In class, select an organism and have the class develop a list of environmental components that interact with the organism. This list should include living and nonliving categories. 5. The U.S. Census Bureau maintains updated population clocks that estimate the United States and world populations (www.census.gov/main/www/popclock.html). If students have a general idea of the human population of the United States, statistics about the number of people affected with a disease or disaster become more significant. For example, the current population of the United States is more than 306,000,000 (2008). It is currently estimated that at least one million people in the United States are infected with HIV. The number of people infected with HIV is impressive and concerning, but not perhaps as meaningful as the realization that this represents one of at least every 300 people in the United States. Although the infected people are not evenly distributed amongst geographic and ethnic groups, if you apply this generality to the enrollments in your classes the students might better understand the tremendous impact of HIV infection. 6. The authors make an analogy between the four bases used to form genes and the 26 letters of the English alphabet used to create words and sentences. One could also make an analogy between the four bases and trains composed of four different types of railroad cars (perhaps an engine, boxcar, tanker, and flatcar). Imagine how many different types of trains one could make using just one hundred rail cars of four different types. (The answer is 4 100 .) 7. An excellent introduction to the domains and kingdoms of life is presented at (www.ucmp.berkeley.edu/exhibits/historyoflife.php).
  • #9: Student Misconceptions and Concerns 1. Many students enter our courses with a limited appreciation of the diversity of life. Ask any group of freshmen at the start of the semester to write down the first type of animal that comes to mind, and the most frequent response is a mammal. (In my courses, over a 21-year period, more than 98% of the examples have been mammals.) As the diversity of life is explored, the common heritage of biological organization can be less, and not more, apparent. The diverse forms, habits, and ecological interactions overwhelm our senses with differences. Emphasizing the diversity and unifying aspects of life is necessary for a greater understanding of the evolutionary history of life on Earth. 2. We live in a world that is largely understood by what we can distinguish and identify with our naked senses. However, the diversity of life and the levels of biological organization extend well below the physical scale of our daily lives. For many students, appreciating the diversity of the microscopic world is abstract, nearly on par with an understanding of the workings of atoms and molecules. A laboratory opportunity to examine the microscopic details of objects from our daily lives (the surface of potato chips, the structure of table salt and sugar, the details of a blade of grass) can be an important sensory extension that prepares the mind for greater comprehension of these minute biological details. Teaching Tips 1. Consider asking students to bring to class a page or two of some article about biology that appeared in the media in the last month. Alternatively, you could have each student email a Web address of a recent biology-related news event to you. You might even have them e-mail relevant articles to you for each of the main topics you address throughout the semester. 2. The scientific organization Sigma Xi offers a free e-mail summary of the major science news articles each weekday. The first paragraph or so of each article is included in the e-mail with a hyperlink to the source of the entire article. The topics are most diverse and can be an excellent way to be aware of daily scientific announcements and reports. Typically, about ten articles are cited in each weekday email. To sign up for this free service, go to (www.americanscientist.org/). 3. For a chance to add a little math to the biological levels of organization, consider calculating the general scale differences between each level of biological organization. For example, are cells generally 5, 10, 50, 100 times more massive than organelles? Are organelles generally 5, 10, 50, 100 times more massive than macromolecules? For some levels of organization, such as ecosystems, communities, and populations, size/scale differences are perhaps less relevant and more problematic to consider. However, at the smaller levels, the sense of scale might enhance an appreciation for levels of biological organization. 4. Help the class think through the diverse interactions between an organism and its environment. In class, select an organism and have the class develop a list of environmental components that interact with the organism. This list should include living and nonliving categories. 5. The U.S. Census Bureau maintains updated population clocks that estimate the United States and world populations (www.census.gov/main/www/popclock.html). If students have a general idea of the human population of the United States, statistics about the number of people affected with a disease or disaster become more significant. For example, the current population of the United States is more than 306,000,000 (2008). It is currently estimated that at least one million people in the United States are infected with HIV. The number of people infected with HIV is impressive and concerning, but not perhaps as meaningful as the realization that this represents one of at least every 300 people in the United States. Although the infected people are not evenly distributed amongst geographic and ethnic groups, if you apply this generality to the enrollments in your classes the students might better understand the tremendous impact of HIV infection. 6. The authors make an analogy between the four bases used to form genes and the 26 letters of the English alphabet used to create words and sentences. One could also make an analogy between the four bases and trains composed of four different types of railroad cars (perhaps an engine, boxcar, tanker, and flatcar). Imagine how many different types of trains one could make using just one hundred rail cars of four different types. (The answer is 4 100 .) 7. An excellent introduction to the domains and kingdoms of life is presented at (www.ucmp.berkeley.edu/exhibits/historyoflife.php).
  • #11: Student Misconceptions and Concerns 1. Many students enter our courses with a limited appreciation of the diversity of life. Ask any group of freshmen at the start of the semester to write down the first type of animal that comes to mind, and the most frequent response is a mammal. (In my courses, over a 21-year period, more than 98% of the examples have been mammals.) As the diversity of life is explored, the common heritage of biological organization can be less, and not more, apparent. The diverse forms, habits, and ecological interactions overwhelm our senses with differences. Emphasizing the diversity and unifying aspects of life is necessary for a greater understanding of the evolutionary history of life on Earth. 2. We live in a world that is largely understood by what we can distinguish and identify with our naked senses. However, the diversity of life and the levels of biological organization extend well below the physical scale of our daily lives. For many students, appreciating the diversity of the microscopic world is abstract, nearly on par with an understanding of the workings of atoms and molecules. A laboratory opportunity to examine the microscopic details of objects from our daily lives (the surface of potato chips, the structure of table salt and sugar, the details of a blade of grass) can be an important sensory extension that prepares the mind for greater comprehension of these minute biological details. Teaching Tips 1. Consider asking students to bring to class a page or two of some article about biology that appeared in the media in the last month. Alternatively, you could have each student email a Web address of a recent biology-related news event to you. You might even have them e-mail relevant articles to you for each of the main topics you address throughout the semester. 2. The scientific organization Sigma Xi offers a free e-mail summary of the major science news articles each weekday. The first paragraph or so of each article is included in the e-mail with a hyperlink to the source of the entire article. The topics are most diverse and can be an excellent way to be aware of daily scientific announcements and reports. Typically, about ten articles are cited in each weekday email. To sign up for this free service, go to (www.americanscientist.org/). 3. For a chance to add a little math to the biological levels of organization, consider calculating the general scale differences between each level of biological organization. For example, are cells generally 5, 10, 50, 100 times more massive than organelles? Are organelles generally 5, 10, 50, 100 times more massive than macromolecules? For some levels of organization, such as ecosystems, communities, and populations, size/scale differences are perhaps less relevant and more problematic to consider. However, at the smaller levels, the sense of scale might enhance an appreciation for levels of biological organization. 4. Help the class think through the diverse interactions between an organism and its environment. In class, select an organism and have the class develop a list of environmental components that interact with the organism. This list should include living and nonliving categories. 5. The U.S. Census Bureau maintains updated population clocks that estimate the United States and world populations (www.census.gov/main/www/popclock.html). If students have a general idea of the human population of the United States, statistics about the number of people affected with a disease or disaster become more significant. For example, the current population of the United States is more than 306,000,000 (2008). It is currently estimated that at least one million people in the United States are infected with HIV. The number of people infected with HIV is impressive and concerning, but not perhaps as meaningful as the realization that this represents one of at least every 300 people in the United States. Although the infected people are not evenly distributed amongst geographic and ethnic groups, if you apply this generality to the enrollments in your classes the students might better understand the tremendous impact of HIV infection. 6. The authors make an analogy between the four bases used to form genes and the 26 letters of the English alphabet used to create words and sentences. One could also make an analogy between the four bases and trains composed of four different types of railroad cars (perhaps an engine, boxcar, tanker, and flatcar). Imagine how many different types of trains one could make using just one hundred rail cars of four different types. (The answer is 4 100 .) 7. An excellent introduction to the domains and kingdoms of life is presented at (www.ucmp.berkeley.edu/exhibits/historyoflife.php).
  • #15: Student Misconceptions and Concerns 1. Many students enter our courses with a limited appreciation of the diversity of life. Ask any group of freshmen at the start of the semester to write down the first type of animal that comes to mind, and the most frequent response is a mammal. (In my courses, over a 21-year period, more than 98% of the examples have been mammals.) As the diversity of life is explored, the common heritage of biological organization can be less, and not more, apparent. The diverse forms, habits, and ecological interactions overwhelm our senses with differences. Emphasizing the diversity and unifying aspects of life is necessary for a greater understanding of the evolutionary history of life on Earth. 2. We live in a world that is largely understood by what we can distinguish and identify with our naked senses. However, the diversity of life and the levels of biological organization extend well below the physical scale of our daily lives. For many students, appreciating the diversity of the microscopic world is abstract, nearly on par with an understanding of the workings of atoms and molecules. A laboratory opportunity to examine the microscopic details of objects from our daily lives (the surface of potato chips, the structure of table salt and sugar, the details of a blade of grass) can be an important sensory extension that prepares the mind for greater comprehension of these minute biological details. Teaching Tips 1. Consider asking students to bring to class a page or two of some article about biology that appeared in the media in the last month. Alternatively, you could have each student email a Web address of a recent biology-related news event to you. You might even have them e-mail relevant articles to you for each of the main topics you address throughout the semester. 2. The scientific organization Sigma Xi offers a free e-mail summary of the major science news articles each weekday. The first paragraph or so of each article is included in the e-mail with a hyperlink to the source of the entire article. The topics are most diverse and can be an excellent way to be aware of daily scientific announcements and reports. Typically, about ten articles are cited in each weekday email. To sign up for this free service, go to (www.americanscientist.org/). 3. For a chance to add a little math to the biological levels of organization, consider calculating the general scale differences between each level of biological organization. For example, are cells generally 5, 10, 50, 100 times more massive than organelles? Are organelles generally 5, 10, 50, 100 times more massive than macromolecules? For some levels of organization, such as ecosystems, communities, and populations, size/scale differences are perhaps less relevant and more problematic to consider. However, at the smaller levels, the sense of scale might enhance an appreciation for levels of biological organization. 4. Help the class think through the diverse interactions between an organism and its environment. In class, select an organism and have the class develop a list of environmental components that interact with the organism. This list should include living and nonliving categories. 5. The U.S. Census Bureau maintains updated population clocks that estimate the United States and world populations (www.census.gov/main/www/popclock.html). If students have a general idea of the human population of the United States, statistics about the number of people affected with a disease or disaster become more significant. For example, the current population of the United States is more than 306,000,000 (2008). It is currently estimated that at least one million people in the United States are infected with HIV. The number of people infected with HIV is impressive and concerning, but not perhaps as meaningful as the realization that this represents one of at least every 300 people in the United States. Although the infected people are not evenly distributed amongst geographic and ethnic groups, if you apply this generality to the enrollments in your classes the students might better understand the tremendous impact of HIV infection. 6. The authors make an analogy between the four bases used to form genes and the 26 letters of the English alphabet used to create words and sentences. One could also make an analogy between the four bases and trains composed of four different types of railroad cars (perhaps an engine, boxcar, tanker, and flatcar). Imagine how many different types of trains one could make using just one hundred rail cars of four different types. (The answer is 4 100 .) 7. An excellent introduction to the domains and kingdoms of life is presented at (www.ucmp.berkeley.edu/exhibits/historyoflife.php).
  • #16: Student Misconceptions and Concerns 1. Many students enter our courses with a limited appreciation of the diversity of life. Ask any group of freshmen at the start of the semester to write down the first type of animal that comes to mind, and the most frequent response is a mammal. (In my courses, over a 21-year period, more than 98% of the examples have been mammals.) As the diversity of life is explored, the common heritage of biological organization can be less, and not more, apparent. The diverse forms, habits, and ecological interactions overwhelm our senses with differences. Emphasizing the diversity and unifying aspects of life is necessary for a greater understanding of the evolutionary history of life on Earth. 2. We live in a world that is largely understood by what we can distinguish and identify with our naked senses. However, the diversity of life and the levels of biological organization extend well below the physical scale of our daily lives. For many students, appreciating the diversity of the microscopic world is abstract, nearly on par with an understanding of the workings of atoms and molecules. A laboratory opportunity to examine the microscopic details of objects from our daily lives (the surface of potato chips, the structure of table salt and sugar, the details of a blade of grass) can be an important sensory extension that prepares the mind for greater comprehension of these minute biological details. Teaching Tips 1. Consider asking students to bring to class a page or two of some article about biology that appeared in the media in the last month. Alternatively, you could have each student email a Web address of a recent biology-related news event to you. You might even have them e-mail relevant articles to you for each of the main topics you address throughout the semester. 2. The scientific organization Sigma Xi offers a free e-mail summary of the major science news articles each weekday. The first paragraph or so of each article is included in the e-mail with a hyperlink to the source of the entire article. The topics are most diverse and can be an excellent way to be aware of daily scientific announcements and reports. Typically, about ten articles are cited in each weekday email. To sign up for this free service, go to (www.americanscientist.org/). 3. For a chance to add a little math to the biological levels of organization, consider calculating the general scale differences between each level of biological organization. For example, are cells generally 5, 10, 50, 100 times more massive than organelles? Are organelles generally 5, 10, 50, 100 times more massive than macromolecules? For some levels of organization, such as ecosystems, communities, and populations, size/scale differences are perhaps less relevant and more problematic to consider. However, at the smaller levels, the sense of scale might enhance an appreciation for levels of biological organization. 4. Help the class think through the diverse interactions between an organism and its environment. In class, select an organism and have the class develop a list of environmental components that interact with the organism. This list should include living and nonliving categories. 5. The U.S. Census Bureau maintains updated population clocks that estimate the United States and world populations (www.census.gov/main/www/popclock.html). If students have a general idea of the human population of the United States, statistics about the number of people affected with a disease or disaster become more significant. For example, the current population of the United States is more than 306,000,000 (2008). It is currently estimated that at least one million people in the United States are infected with HIV. The number of people infected with HIV is impressive and concerning, but not perhaps as meaningful as the realization that this represents one of at least every 300 people in the United States. Although the infected people are not evenly distributed amongst geographic and ethnic groups, if you apply this generality to the enrollments in your classes the students might better understand the tremendous impact of HIV infection. 6. The authors make an analogy between the four bases used to form genes and the 26 letters of the English alphabet used to create words and sentences. One could also make an analogy between the four bases and trains composed of four different types of railroad cars (perhaps an engine, boxcar, tanker, and flatcar). Imagine how many different types of trains one could make using just one hundred rail cars of four different types. (The answer is 4 100 .) 7. An excellent introduction to the domains and kingdoms of life is presented at (www.ucmp.berkeley.edu/exhibits/historyoflife.php).
  • #17: Figure 1.3 Nutrient and energy flow in an ecosystem.
  • #18: Student Misconceptions and Concerns 1. Many students enter our courses with a limited appreciation of the diversity of life. Ask any group of freshmen at the start of the semester to write down the first type of animal that comes to mind, and the most frequent response is a mammal. (In my courses, over a 21-year period, more than 98% of the examples have been mammals.) As the diversity of life is explored, the common heritage of biological organization can be less, and not more, apparent. The diverse forms, habits, and ecological interactions overwhelm our senses with differences. Emphasizing the diversity and unifying aspects of life is necessary for a greater understanding of the evolutionary history of life on Earth. 2. We live in a world that is largely understood by what we can distinguish and identify with our naked senses. However, the diversity of life and the levels of biological organization extend well below the physical scale of our daily lives. For many students, appreciating the diversity of the microscopic world is abstract, nearly on par with an understanding of the workings of atoms and molecules. A laboratory opportunity to examine the microscopic details of objects from our daily lives (the surface of potato chips, the structure of table salt and sugar, the details of a blade of grass) can be an important sensory extension that prepares the mind for greater comprehension of these minute biological details. Teaching Tips 1. Consider asking students to bring to class a page or two of some article about biology that appeared in the media in the last month. Alternatively, you could have each student email a Web address of a recent biology-related news event to you. You might even have them e-mail relevant articles to you for each of the main topics you address throughout the semester. 2. The scientific organization Sigma Xi offers a free e-mail summary of the major science news articles each weekday. The first paragraph or so of each article is included in the e-mail with a hyperlink to the source of the entire article. The topics are most diverse and can be an excellent way to be aware of daily scientific announcements and reports. Typically, about ten articles are cited in each weekday email. To sign up for this free service, go to (www.americanscientist.org/). 3. For a chance to add a little math to the biological levels of organization, consider calculating the general scale differences between each level of biological organization. For example, are cells generally 5, 10, 50, 100 times more massive than organelles? Are organelles generally 5, 10, 50, 100 times more massive than macromolecules? For some levels of organization, such as ecosystems, communities, and populations, size/scale differences are perhaps less relevant and more problematic to consider. However, at the smaller levels, the sense of scale might enhance an appreciation for levels of biological organization. 4. Help the class think through the diverse interactions between an organism and its environment. In class, select an organism and have the class develop a list of environmental components that interact with the organism. This list should include living and nonliving categories. 5. The U.S. Census Bureau maintains updated population clocks that estimate the United States and world populations (www.census.gov/main/www/popclock.html). If students have a general idea of the human population of the United States, statistics about the number of people affected with a disease or disaster become more significant. For example, the current population of the United States is more than 306,000,000 (2008). It is currently estimated that at least one million people in the United States are infected with HIV. The number of people infected with HIV is impressive and concerning, but not perhaps as meaningful as the realization that this represents one of at least every 300 people in the United States. Although the infected people are not evenly distributed amongst geographic and ethnic groups, if you apply this generality to the enrollments in your classes the students might better understand the tremendous impact of HIV infection. 6. The authors make an analogy between the four bases used to form genes and the 26 letters of the English alphabet used to create words and sentences. One could also make an analogy between the four bases and trains composed of four different types of railroad cars (perhaps an engine, boxcar, tanker, and flatcar). Imagine how many different types of trains one could make using just one hundred rail cars of four different types. (The answer is 4 100 .) 7. An excellent introduction to the domains and kingdoms of life is presented at (www.ucmp.berkeley.edu/exhibits/historyoflife.php).
  • #19: Student Misconceptions and Concerns 1. Many students enter our courses with a limited appreciation of the diversity of life. Ask any group of freshmen at the start of the semester to write down the first type of animal that comes to mind, and the most frequent response is a mammal. (In my courses, over a 21-year period, more than 98% of the examples have been mammals.) As the diversity of life is explored, the common heritage of biological organization can be less, and not more, apparent. The diverse forms, habits, and ecological interactions overwhelm our senses with differences. Emphasizing the diversity and unifying aspects of life is necessary for a greater understanding of the evolutionary history of life on Earth. 2. We live in a world that is largely understood by what we can distinguish and identify with our naked senses. However, the diversity of life and the levels of biological organization extend well below the physical scale of our daily lives. For many students, appreciating the diversity of the microscopic world is abstract, nearly on par with an understanding of the workings of atoms and molecules. A laboratory opportunity to examine the microscopic details of objects from our daily lives (the surface of potato chips, the structure of table salt and sugar, the details of a blade of grass) can be an important sensory extension that prepares the mind for greater comprehension of these minute biological details. Teaching Tips 1. Consider asking students to bring to class a page or two of some article about biology that appeared in the media in the last month. Alternatively, you could have each student email a Web address of a recent biology-related news event to you. You might even have them e-mail relevant articles to you for each of the main topics you address throughout the semester. 2. The scientific organization Sigma Xi offers a free e-mail summary of the major science news articles each weekday. The first paragraph or so of each article is included in the e-mail with a hyperlink to the source of the entire article. The topics are most diverse and can be an excellent way to be aware of daily scientific announcements and reports. Typically, about ten articles are cited in each weekday email. To sign up for this free service, go to (www.americanscientist.org/). 3. For a chance to add a little math to the biological levels of organization, consider calculating the general scale differences between each level of biological organization. For example, are cells generally 5, 10, 50, 100 times more massive than organelles? Are organelles generally 5, 10, 50, 100 times more massive than macromolecules? For some levels of organization, such as ecosystems, communities, and populations, size/scale differences are perhaps less relevant and more problematic to consider. However, at the smaller levels, the sense of scale might enhance an appreciation for levels of biological organization. 4. Help the class think through the diverse interactions between an organism and its environment. In class, select an organism and have the class develop a list of environmental components that interact with the organism. This list should include living and nonliving categories. 5. The U.S. Census Bureau maintains updated population clocks that estimate the United States and world populations (www.census.gov/main/www/popclock.html). If students have a general idea of the human population of the United States, statistics about the number of people affected with a disease or disaster become more significant. For example, the current population of the United States is more than 306,000,000 (2008). It is currently estimated that at least one million people in the United States are infected with HIV. The number of people infected with HIV is impressive and concerning, but not perhaps as meaningful as the realization that this represents one of at least every 300 people in the United States. Although the infected people are not evenly distributed amongst geographic and ethnic groups, if you apply this generality to the enrollments in your classes the students might better understand the tremendous impact of HIV infection. 6. The authors make an analogy between the four bases used to form genes and the 26 letters of the English alphabet used to create words and sentences. One could also make an analogy between the four bases and trains composed of four different types of railroad cars (perhaps an engine, boxcar, tanker, and flatcar). Imagine how many different types of trains one could make using just one hundred rail cars of four different types. (The answer is 4 100 .) 7. An excellent introduction to the domains and kingdoms of life is presented at (www.ucmp.berkeley.edu/exhibits/historyoflife.php).
  • #20: Student Misconceptions and Concerns 1. Many students enter our courses with a limited appreciation of the diversity of life. Ask any group of freshmen at the start of the semester to write down the first type of animal that comes to mind, and the most frequent response is a mammal. (In my courses, over a 21-year period, more than 98% of the examples have been mammals.) As the diversity of life is explored, the common heritage of biological organization can be less, and not more, apparent. The diverse forms, habits, and ecological interactions overwhelm our senses with differences. Emphasizing the diversity and unifying aspects of life is necessary for a greater understanding of the evolutionary history of life on Earth. 2. We live in a world that is largely understood by what we can distinguish and identify with our naked senses. However, the diversity of life and the levels of biological organization extend well below the physical scale of our daily lives. For many students, appreciating the diversity of the microscopic world is abstract, nearly on par with an understanding of the workings of atoms and molecules. A laboratory opportunity to examine the microscopic details of objects from our daily lives (the surface of potato chips, the structure of table salt and sugar, the details of a blade of grass) can be an important sensory extension that prepares the mind for greater comprehension of these minute biological details. Teaching Tips 1. Consider asking students to bring to class a page or two of some article about biology that appeared in the media in the last month. Alternatively, you could have each student email a Web address of a recent biology-related news event to you. You might even have them e-mail relevant articles to you for each of the main topics you address throughout the semester. 2. The scientific organization Sigma Xi offers a free e-mail summary of the major science news articles each weekday. The first paragraph or so of each article is included in the e-mail with a hyperlink to the source of the entire article. The topics are most diverse and can be an excellent way to be aware of daily scientific announcements and reports. Typically, about ten articles are cited in each weekday email. To sign up for this free service, go to (www.americanscientist.org/). 3. For a chance to add a little math to the biological levels of organization, consider calculating the general scale differences between each level of biological organization. For example, are cells generally 5, 10, 50, 100 times more massive than organelles? Are organelles generally 5, 10, 50, 100 times more massive than macromolecules? For some levels of organization, such as ecosystems, communities, and populations, size/scale differences are perhaps less relevant and more problematic to consider. However, at the smaller levels, the sense of scale might enhance an appreciation for levels of biological organization. 4. Help the class think through the diverse interactions between an organism and its environment. In class, select an organism and have the class develop a list of environmental components that interact with the organism. This list should include living and nonliving categories. 5. The U.S. Census Bureau maintains updated population clocks that estimate the United States and world populations (www.census.gov/main/www/popclock.html). If students have a general idea of the human population of the United States, statistics about the number of people affected with a disease or disaster become more significant. For example, the current population of the United States is more than 306,000,000 (2008). It is currently estimated that at least one million people in the United States are infected with HIV. The number of people infected with HIV is impressive and concerning, but not perhaps as meaningful as the realization that this represents one of at least every 300 people in the United States. Although the infected people are not evenly distributed amongst geographic and ethnic groups, if you apply this generality to the enrollments in your classes the students might better understand the tremendous impact of HIV infection. 6. The authors make an analogy between the four bases used to form genes and the 26 letters of the English alphabet used to create words and sentences. One could also make an analogy between the four bases and trains composed of four different types of railroad cars (perhaps an engine, boxcar, tanker, and flatcar). Imagine how many different types of trains one could make using just one hundred rail cars of four different types. (The answer is 4 100 .) 7. An excellent introduction to the domains and kingdoms of life is presented at (www.ucmp.berkeley.edu/exhibits/historyoflife.php).
  • #21: Student Misconceptions and Concerns 1. Many students enter our courses with a limited appreciation of the diversity of life. Ask any group of freshmen at the start of the semester to write down the first type of animal that comes to mind, and the most frequent response is a mammal. (In my courses, over a 21-year period, more than 98% of the examples have been mammals.) As the diversity of life is explored, the common heritage of biological organization can be less, and not more, apparent. The diverse forms, habits, and ecological interactions overwhelm our senses with differences. Emphasizing the diversity and unifying aspects of life is necessary for a greater understanding of the evolutionary history of life on Earth. 2. We live in a world that is largely understood by what we can distinguish and identify with our naked senses. However, the diversity of life and the levels of biological organization extend well below the physical scale of our daily lives. For many students, appreciating the diversity of the microscopic world is abstract, nearly on par with an understanding of the workings of atoms and molecules. A laboratory opportunity to examine the microscopic details of objects from our daily lives (the surface of potato chips, the structure of table salt and sugar, the details of a blade of grass) can be an important sensory extension that prepares the mind for greater comprehension of these minute biological details. Teaching Tips 1. Consider asking students to bring to class a page or two of some article about biology that appeared in the media in the last month. Alternatively, you could have each student email a Web address of a recent biology-related news event to you. You might even have them e-mail relevant articles to you for each of the main topics you address throughout the semester. 2. The scientific organization Sigma Xi offers a free e-mail summary of the major science news articles each weekday. The first paragraph or so of each article is included in the e-mail with a hyperlink to the source of the entire article. The topics are most diverse and can be an excellent way to be aware of daily scientific announcements and reports. Typically, about ten articles are cited in each weekday email. To sign up for this free service, go to (www.americanscientist.org/). 3. For a chance to add a little math to the biological levels of organization, consider calculating the general scale differences between each level of biological organization. For example, are cells generally 5, 10, 50, 100 times more massive than organelles? Are organelles generally 5, 10, 50, 100 times more massive than macromolecules? For some levels of organization, such as ecosystems, communities, and populations, size/scale differences are perhaps less relevant and more problematic to consider. However, at the smaller levels, the sense of scale might enhance an appreciation for levels of biological organization. 4. Help the class think through the diverse interactions between an organism and its environment. In class, select an organism and have the class develop a list of environmental components that interact with the organism. This list should include living and nonliving categories. 5. The U.S. Census Bureau maintains updated population clocks that estimate the United States and world populations (www.census.gov/main/www/popclock.html). If students have a general idea of the human population of the United States, statistics about the number of people affected with a disease or disaster become more significant. For example, the current population of the United States is more than 306,000,000 (2008). It is currently estimated that at least one million people in the United States are infected with HIV. The number of people infected with HIV is impressive and concerning, but not perhaps as meaningful as the realization that this represents one of at least every 300 people in the United States. Although the infected people are not evenly distributed amongst geographic and ethnic groups, if you apply this generality to the enrollments in your classes the students might better understand the tremendous impact of HIV infection. 6. The authors make an analogy between the four bases used to form genes and the 26 letters of the English alphabet used to create words and sentences. One could also make an analogy between the four bases and trains composed of four different types of railroad cars (perhaps an engine, boxcar, tanker, and flatcar). Imagine how many different types of trains one could make using just one hundred rail cars of four different types. (The answer is 4 100 .) 7. An excellent introduction to the domains and kingdoms of life is presented at (www.ucmp.berkeley.edu/exhibits/historyoflife.php).
  • #22: Student Misconceptions and Concerns 1. Many students enter our courses with a limited appreciation of the diversity of life. Ask any group of freshmen at the start of the semester to write down the first type of animal that comes to mind, and the most frequent response is a mammal. (In my courses, over a 21-year period, more than 98% of the examples have been mammals.) As the diversity of life is explored, the common heritage of biological organization can be less, and not more, apparent. The diverse forms, habits, and ecological interactions overwhelm our senses with differences. Emphasizing the diversity and unifying aspects of life is necessary for a greater understanding of the evolutionary history of life on Earth. 2. We live in a world that is largely understood by what we can distinguish and identify with our naked senses. However, the diversity of life and the levels of biological organization extend well below the physical scale of our daily lives. For many students, appreciating the diversity of the microscopic world is abstract, nearly on par with an understanding of the workings of atoms and molecules. A laboratory opportunity to examine the microscopic details of objects from our daily lives (the surface of potato chips, the structure of table salt and sugar, the details of a blade of grass) can be an important sensory extension that prepares the mind for greater comprehension of these minute biological details. Teaching Tips 1. Consider asking students to bring to class a page or two of some article about biology that appeared in the media in the last month. Alternatively, you could have each student email a Web address of a recent biology-related news event to you. You might even have them e-mail relevant articles to you for each of the main topics you address throughout the semester. 2. The scientific organization Sigma Xi offers a free e-mail summary of the major science news articles each weekday. The first paragraph or so of each article is included in the e-mail with a hyperlink to the source of the entire article. The topics are most diverse and can be an excellent way to be aware of daily scientific announcements and reports. Typically, about ten articles are cited in each weekday email. To sign up for this free service, go to (www.americanscientist.org/). 3. For a chance to add a little math to the biological levels of organization, consider calculating the general scale differences between each level of biological organization. For example, are cells generally 5, 10, 50, 100 times more massive than organelles? Are organelles generally 5, 10, 50, 100 times more massive than macromolecules? For some levels of organization, such as ecosystems, communities, and populations, size/scale differences are perhaps less relevant and more problematic to consider. However, at the smaller levels, the sense of scale might enhance an appreciation for levels of biological organization. 4. Help the class think through the diverse interactions between an organism and its environment. In class, select an organism and have the class develop a list of environmental components that interact with the organism. This list should include living and nonliving categories. 5. The U.S. Census Bureau maintains updated population clocks that estimate the United States and world populations (www.census.gov/main/www/popclock.html). If students have a general idea of the human population of the United States, statistics about the number of people affected with a disease or disaster become more significant. For example, the current population of the United States is more than 306,000,000 (2008). It is currently estimated that at least one million people in the United States are infected with HIV. The number of people infected with HIV is impressive and concerning, but not perhaps as meaningful as the realization that this represents one of at least every 300 people in the United States. Although the infected people are not evenly distributed amongst geographic and ethnic groups, if you apply this generality to the enrollments in your classes the students might better understand the tremendous impact of HIV infection. 6. The authors make an analogy between the four bases used to form genes and the 26 letters of the English alphabet used to create words and sentences. One could also make an analogy between the four bases and trains composed of four different types of railroad cars (perhaps an engine, boxcar, tanker, and flatcar). Imagine how many different types of trains one could make using just one hundred rail cars of four different types. (The answer is 4 100 .) 7. An excellent introduction to the domains and kingdoms of life is presented at (www.ucmp.berkeley.edu/exhibits/historyoflife.php).
  • #23: Student Misconceptions and Concerns 1. Students often believe that Charles Darwin was the first to suggest that life evolves; the early contributions by Greek philosophers and the work of Jean-Baptiste Lamarck may be unappreciated. Consider emphasizing this earlier work in your introduction to Darwin’s contributions. 2. Students often misunderstand the basic process of evolution and instead reflect a Lamarckian point of view. Organisms do not evolve structures deliberately or out of want or need. Individuals do not evolve. Evolution is a passive process in which the environment favors one or more variations of a trait that naturally exist within a population. Teaching Tips 1. Many resources related to Charles Darwin are available on the Internet: a. General evolution resources http://evolution.berkeley.edu/ http://nationalacademies.org/evolution/ http://ncseweb.org/ b. The complete works of Charles Darwin can be found at http://darwin-online.org.uk/ c. Details of Charles Darwin’s home are located at http://williamcalvin.com/bookshelf/down_hse.htm d. An extensive usenet newsgroup devoted to the discussion and debate of biological and physical origins is at www.talkorigins.org/. 2. There are many variations of games that model aspects of natural selection. Here is one that is appropriate for a laboratory exercise. Purchase several bags of dried grocery store beans of diverse sizes and colors. Large lima beans, small white beans, red beans, and black beans are all good options. Consider the beans f o od for the p r edatory students. To begin, randomly distribute (throw) 100 beans of each of four colors onto a green lawn. Allow individual students to collect beans over a set period, perhaps 3 minutes. Then count the total number of each color of bean collected. Assume that the beans remaining undetected (still in the lawn) reproduce by doubling in number. Calculate the number of beans of each color remaining in the field. For the next round, count out the number of each color to add to the lawn so that the new totals on the lawn will double the number of beans that students did not find in the first g e neration. Before each predatory episode, record the total number of each color of beans that have s u rvived in the field. Then let your student p r edators out for another round of collection (generation). Repeat the process for at least three or four g e nerations. Note what color of beans has been favored by the environment. Apply Darwin’s f a cts and inescapable conclusions to this exercise. Ask students to speculate which colors might have been favored during another season or on a parking lot. 3. Many websites devoted to domesticated species can be used to illustrate the variety of forms produced by artificial selection. Those devoted to pigeons and dogs have proven to be especially useful.
  • #24: Student Misconceptions and Concerns 1. Many students enter our courses with a limited appreciation of the diversity of life. Ask any group of freshmen at the start of the semester to write down the first type of animal that comes to mind, and the most frequent response is a mammal. (In my courses, over a 21-year period, more than 98% of the examples have been mammals.) As the diversity of life is explored, the common heritage of biological organization can be less, and not more, apparent. The diverse forms, habits, and ecological interactions overwhelm our senses with differences. Emphasizing the diversity and unifying aspects of life is necessary for a greater understanding of the evolutionary history of life on Earth. 2. We live in a world that is largely understood by what we can distinguish and identify with our naked senses. However, the diversity of life and the levels of biological organization extend well below the physical scale of our daily lives. For many students, appreciating the diversity of the microscopic world is abstract, nearly on par with an understanding of the workings of atoms and molecules. A laboratory opportunity to examine the microscopic details of objects from our daily lives (the surface of potato chips, the structure of table salt and sugar, the details of a blade of grass) can be an important sensory extension that prepares the mind for greater comprehension of these minute biological details. Teaching Tips 1. Consider asking students to bring to class a page or two of some article about biology that appeared in the media in the last month. Alternatively, you could have each student email a Web address of a recent biology-related news event to you. You might even have them e-mail relevant articles to you for each of the main topics you address throughout the semester. 2. The scientific organization Sigma Xi offers a free e-mail summary of the major science news articles each weekday. The first paragraph or so of each article is included in the e-mail with a hyperlink to the source of the entire article. The topics are most diverse and can be an excellent way to be aware of daily scientific announcements and reports. Typically, about ten articles are cited in each weekday email. To sign up for this free service, go to (www.americanscientist.org/). 3. For a chance to add a little math to the biological levels of organization, consider calculating the general scale differences between each level of biological organization. For example, are cells generally 5, 10, 50, 100 times more massive than organelles? Are organelles generally 5, 10, 50, 100 times more massive than macromolecules? For some levels of organization, such as ecosystems, communities, and populations, size/scale differences are perhaps less relevant and more problematic to consider. However, at the smaller levels, the sense of scale might enhance an appreciation for levels of biological organization. 4. Help the class think through the diverse interactions between an organism and its environment. In class, select an organism and have the class develop a list of environmental components that interact with the organism. This list should include living and nonliving categories. 5. The U.S. Census Bureau maintains updated population clocks that estimate the United States and world populations (www.census.gov/main/www/popclock.html). If students have a general idea of the human population of the United States, statistics about the number of people affected with a disease or disaster become more significant. For example, the current population of the United States is more than 306,000,000 (2008). It is currently estimated that at least one million people in the United States are infected with HIV. The number of people infected with HIV is impressive and concerning, but not perhaps as meaningful as the realization that this represents one of at least every 300 people in the United States. Although the infected people are not evenly distributed amongst geographic and ethnic groups, if you apply this generality to the enrollments in your classes the students might better understand the tremendous impact of HIV infection. 6. The authors make an analogy between the four bases used to form genes and the 26 letters of the English alphabet used to create words and sentences. One could also make an analogy between the four bases and trains composed of four different types of railroad cars (perhaps an engine, boxcar, tanker, and flatcar). Imagine how many different types of trains one could make using just one hundred rail cars of four different types. (The answer is 4 100 .) 7. An excellent introduction to the domains and kingdoms of life is presented at (www.ucmp.berkeley.edu/exhibits/historyoflife.php).
  • #25: Figure 1.10 An evolutionary tree of bears.
  • #26: Student Misconceptions and Concerns 1. Many students enter our courses with a limited appreciation of the diversity of life. Ask any group of freshmen at the start of the semester to write down the first type of animal that comes to mind, and the most frequent response is a mammal. (In my courses, over a 21-year period, more than 98% of the examples have been mammals.) As the diversity of life is explored, the common heritage of biological organization can be less, and not more, apparent. The diverse forms, habits, and ecological interactions overwhelm our senses with differences. Emphasizing the diversity and unifying aspects of life is necessary for a greater understanding of the evolutionary history of life on Earth. 2. We live in a world that is largely understood by what we can distinguish and identify with our naked senses. However, the diversity of life and the levels of biological organization extend well below the physical scale of our daily lives. For many students, appreciating the diversity of the microscopic world is abstract, nearly on par with an understanding of the workings of atoms and molecules. A laboratory opportunity to examine the microscopic details of objects from our daily lives (the surface of potato chips, the structure of table salt and sugar, the details of a blade of grass) can be an important sensory extension that prepares the mind for greater comprehension of these minute biological details. Teaching Tips 1. Consider asking students to bring to class a page or two of some article about biology that appeared in the media in the last month. Alternatively, you could have each student email a Web address of a recent biology-related news event to you. You might even have them e-mail relevant articles to you for each of the main topics you address throughout the semester. 2. The scientific organization Sigma Xi offers a free e-mail summary of the major science news articles each weekday. The first paragraph or so of each article is included in the e-mail with a hyperlink to the source of the entire article. The topics are most diverse and can be an excellent way to be aware of daily scientific announcements and reports. Typically, about ten articles are cited in each weekday email. To sign up for this free service, go to (www.americanscientist.org/). 3. For a chance to add a little math to the biological levels of organization, consider calculating the general scale differences between each level of biological organization. For example, are cells generally 5, 10, 50, 100 times more massive than organelles? Are organelles generally 5, 10, 50, 100 times more massive than macromolecules? For some levels of organization, such as ecosystems, communities, and populations, size/scale differences are perhaps less relevant and more problematic to consider. However, at the smaller levels, the sense of scale might enhance an appreciation for levels of biological organization. 4. Help the class think through the diverse interactions between an organism and its environment. In class, select an organism and have the class develop a list of environmental components that interact with the organism. This list should include living and nonliving categories. 5. The U.S. Census Bureau maintains updated population clocks that estimate the United States and world populations (www.census.gov/main/www/popclock.html). If students have a general idea of the human population of the United States, statistics about the number of people affected with a disease or disaster become more significant. For example, the current population of the United States is more than 306,000,000 (2008). It is currently estimated that at least one million people in the United States are infected with HIV. The number of people infected with HIV is impressive and concerning, but not perhaps as meaningful as the realization that this represents one of at least every 300 people in the United States. Although the infected people are not evenly distributed amongst geographic and ethnic groups, if you apply this generality to the enrollments in your classes the students might better understand the tremendous impact of HIV infection. 6. The authors make an analogy between the four bases used to form genes and the 26 letters of the English alphabet used to create words and sentences. One could also make an analogy between the four bases and trains composed of four different types of railroad cars (perhaps an engine, boxcar, tanker, and flatcar). Imagine how many different types of trains one could make using just one hundred rail cars of four different types. (The answer is 4 100 .) 7. An excellent introduction to the domains and kingdoms of life is presented at (www.ucmp.berkeley.edu/exhibits/historyoflife.php).
  • #27: Student Misconceptions and Concerns 1. Students often believe that Charles Darwin was the first to suggest that life evolves; the early contributions by Greek philosophers and the work of Jean-Baptiste Lamarck may be unappreciated. Consider emphasizing this earlier work in your introduction to Darwin’s contributions. 2. Students often misunderstand the basic process of evolution and instead reflect a Lamarckian point of view. Organisms do not evolve structures deliberately or out of want or need. Individuals do not evolve. Evolution is a passive process in which the environment favors one or more variations of a trait that naturally exist within a population. Teaching Tips 1. Many resources related to Charles Darwin are available on the Internet: a. General evolution resources http://evolution.berkeley.edu/ http://nationalacademies.org/evolution/ http://ncseweb.org/ b. The complete works of Charles Darwin can be found at http://darwin-online.org.uk/ c. Details of Charles Darwin’s home are located at http://williamcalvin.com/bookshelf/down_hse.htm d. An extensive usenet newsgroup devoted to the discussion and debate of biological and physical origins is at www.talkorigins.org/. 2. There are many variations of games that model aspects of natural selection. Here is one that is appropriate for a laboratory exercise. Purchase several bags of dried grocery store beans of diverse sizes and colors. Large lima beans, small white beans, red beans, and black beans are all good options. Consider the beans f o od for the p r edatory students. To begin, randomly distribute (throw) 100 beans of each of four colors onto a green lawn. Allow individual students to collect beans over a set period, perhaps 3 minutes. Then count the total number of each color of bean collected. Assume that the beans remaining undetected (still in the lawn) reproduce by doubling in number. Calculate the number of beans of each color remaining in the field. For the next round, count out the number of each color to add to the lawn so that the new totals on the lawn will double the number of beans that students did not find in the first g e neration. Before each predatory episode, record the total number of each color of beans that have s u rvived in the field. Then let your student p r edators out for another round of collection (generation). Repeat the process for at least three or four g e nerations. Note what color of beans has been favored by the environment. Apply Darwin’s f a cts and inescapable conclusions to this exercise. Ask students to speculate which colors might have been favored during another season or on a parking lot. 3. Many websites devoted to domesticated species can be used to illustrate the variety of forms produced by artificial selection. Those devoted to pigeons and dogs have proven to be especially useful.
  • #28: Student Misconceptions and Concerns 1. Students often believe that Charles Darwin was the first to suggest that life evolves; the early contributions by Greek philosophers and the work of Jean-Baptiste Lamarck may be unappreciated. Consider emphasizing this earlier work in your introduction to Darwin’s contributions. 2. Students often misunderstand the basic process of evolution and instead reflect a Lamarckian point of view. Organisms do not evolve structures deliberately or out of want or need. Individuals do not evolve. Evolution is a passive process in which the environment favors one or more variations of a trait that naturally exist within a population. Teaching Tips 1. Many resources related to Charles Darwin are available on the Internet: a. General evolution resources http://evolution.berkeley.edu/ http://nationalacademies.org/evolution/ http://ncseweb.org/ b. The complete works of Charles Darwin can be found at http://darwin-online.org.uk/ c. Details of Charles Darwin’s home are located at http://williamcalvin.com/bookshelf/down_hse.htm d. An extensive usenet newsgroup devoted to the discussion and debate of biological and physical origins is at www.talkorigins.org/. 2. There are many variations of games that model aspects of natural selection. Here is one that is appropriate for a laboratory exercise. Purchase several bags of dried grocery store beans of diverse sizes and colors. Large lima beans, small white beans, red beans, and black beans are all good options. Consider the beans f o od for the p r edatory students. To begin, randomly distribute (throw) 100 beans of each of four colors onto a green lawn. Allow individual students to collect beans over a set period, perhaps 3 minutes. Then count the total number of each color of bean collected. Assume that the beans remaining undetected (still in the lawn) reproduce by doubling in number. Calculate the number of beans of each color remaining in the field. For the next round, count out the number of each color to add to the lawn so that the new totals on the lawn will double the number of beans that students did not find in the first g e neration. Before each predatory episode, record the total number of each color of beans that have s u rvived in the field. Then let your student p r edators out for another round of collection (generation). Repeat the process for at least three or four g e nerations. Note what color of beans has been favored by the environment. Apply Darwin’s f a cts and inescapable conclusions to this exercise. Ask students to speculate which colors might have been favored during another season or on a parking lot. 3. Many websites devoted to domesticated species can be used to illustrate the variety of forms produced by artificial selection. Those devoted to pigeons and dogs have proven to be especially useful.
  • #29: Student Misconceptions and Concerns 1. Students often believe that Charles Darwin was the first to suggest that life evolves; the early contributions by Greek philosophers and the work of Jean-Baptiste Lamarck may be unappreciated. Consider emphasizing this earlier work in your introduction to Darwin’s contributions. 2. Students often misunderstand the basic process of evolution and instead reflect a Lamarckian point of view. Organisms do not evolve structures deliberately or out of want or need. Individuals do not evolve. Evolution is a passive process in which the environment favors one or more variations of a trait that naturally exist within a population. Teaching Tips 1. Many resources related to Charles Darwin are available on the Internet: a. General evolution resources http://evolution.berkeley.edu/ http://nationalacademies.org/evolution/ http://ncseweb.org/ b. The complete works of Charles Darwin can be found at http://darwin-online.org.uk/ c. Details of Charles Darwin’s home are located at http://williamcalvin.com/bookshelf/down_hse.htm d. An extensive usenet newsgroup devoted to the discussion and debate of biological and physical origins is at www.talkorigins.org/. 2. There are many variations of games that model aspects of natural selection. Here is one that is appropriate for a laboratory exercise. Purchase several bags of dried grocery store beans of diverse sizes and colors. Large lima beans, small white beans, red beans, and black beans are all good options. Consider the beans f o od for the p r edatory students. To begin, randomly distribute (throw) 100 beans of each of four colors onto a green lawn. Allow individual students to collect beans over a set period, perhaps 3 minutes. Then count the total number of each color of bean collected. Assume that the beans remaining undetected (still in the lawn) reproduce by doubling in number. Calculate the number of beans of each color remaining in the field. For the next round, count out the number of each color to add to the lawn so that the new totals on the lawn will double the number of beans that students did not find in the first g e neration. Before each predatory episode, record the total number of each color of beans that have s u rvived in the field. Then let your student p r edators out for another round of collection (generation). Repeat the process for at least three or four g e nerations. Note what color of beans has been favored by the environment. Apply Darwin’s f a cts and inescapable conclusions to this exercise. Ask students to speculate which colors might have been favored during another season or on a parking lot. 3. Many websites devoted to domesticated species can be used to illustrate the variety of forms produced by artificial selection. Those devoted to pigeons and dogs have proven to be especially useful.
  • #30: Student Misconceptions and Concerns 1. Contrasting the concept of faith with the tentative nature of science can help to define and distinguish science from other ways of knowing. Students sometimes enter science classes expecting absolutes of facts and rigid dogma. Instead, scientific knowledge is tentative, reflecting degrees of confidence closely correlated to the strength of the evidence. 2. The authors’ distinction between natural and supernatural explanations is essential to understanding the power and limits of scientific explanations. Teaching Tips 1. Consider using a laboratory exercise to have your students plan and perhaps conduct investigations using discovery science and a hypothesis-driven approach. Emphasize the processes and not the significance of the questions. Students can conduct descriptive surveys of student behavior (use of pens or pencils for taking notes, use of backpacks) or test hypotheses using controlled trials. Students may need considerable supervision and advice while planning and conducting their experiments. 2. Consider presenting your class with descriptions of several scientific investigations that you have written. Include in your descriptions numerous examples of improper methodology (small sample size, several variables existing between the control and experimental groups, failure to specifically test the hypothesis, etc.). Let small groups or individuals analyze the experiments in class to identify the flaws. This critical analysis allows students the opportunity to suggest the characteristics of good investigations in class. 3. Have your students explain why a coordinated c o nspiracy promoting a specific idea in science is unlikely to succeed. Have your students describe aspects of science that would check fraudulent or erroneous claims and/or political efforts. 4. The authors of Campbell Essential Biology note that the discovery of the structure and functions of DNA has led to a variety of DNA technologies. This technology is discussed in detail in Chapter 12.
  • #31: Student Misconceptions and Concerns 1. Contrasting the concept of faith with the tentative nature of science can help to define and distinguish science from other ways of knowing. Students sometimes enter science classes expecting absolutes of facts and rigid dogma. Instead, scientific knowledge is tentative, reflecting degrees of confidence closely correlated to the strength of the evidence. 2. The authors’ distinction between natural and supernatural explanations is essential to understanding the power and limits of scientific explanations. Teaching Tips 1. Consider using a laboratory exercise to have your students plan and perhaps conduct investigations using discovery science and a hypothesis-driven approach. Emphasize the processes and not the significance of the questions. Students can conduct descriptive surveys of student behavior (use of pens or pencils for taking notes, use of backpacks) or test hypotheses using controlled trials. Students may need considerable supervision and advice while planning and conducting their experiments. 2. Consider presenting your class with descriptions of several scientific investigations that you have written. Include in your descriptions numerous examples of improper methodology (small sample size, several variables existing between the control and experimental groups, failure to specifically test the hypothesis, etc.). Let small groups or individuals analyze the experiments in class to identify the flaws. This critical analysis allows students the opportunity to suggest the characteristics of good investigations in class. 3. Have your students explain why a coordinated c o nspiracy promoting a specific idea in science is unlikely to succeed. Have your students describe aspects of science that would check fraudulent or erroneous claims and/or political efforts. 4. The authors of Campbell Essential Biology note that the discovery of the structure and functions of DNA has led to a variety of DNA technologies. This technology is discussed in detail in Chapter 12.
  • #32: Student Misconceptions and Concerns 1. Contrasting the concept of faith with the tentative nature of science can help to define and distinguish science from other ways of knowing. Students sometimes enter science classes expecting absolutes of facts and rigid dogma. Instead, scientific knowledge is tentative, reflecting degrees of confidence closely correlated to the strength of the evidence. 2. The authors’ distinction between natural and supernatural explanations is essential to understanding the power and limits of scientific explanations. Teaching Tips 1. Consider using a laboratory exercise to have your students plan and perhaps conduct investigations using discovery science and a hypothesis-driven approach. Emphasize the processes and not the significance of the questions. Students can conduct descriptive surveys of student behavior (use of pens or pencils for taking notes, use of backpacks) or test hypotheses using controlled trials. Students may need considerable supervision and advice while planning and conducting their experiments. 2. Consider presenting your class with descriptions of several scientific investigations that you have written. Include in your descriptions numerous examples of improper methodology (small sample size, several variables existing between the control and experimental groups, failure to specifically test the hypothesis, etc.). Let small groups or individuals analyze the experiments in class to identify the flaws. This critical analysis allows students the opportunity to suggest the characteristics of good investigations in class. 3. Have your students explain why a coordinated c o nspiracy promoting a specific idea in science is unlikely to succeed. Have your students describe aspects of science that would check fraudulent or erroneous claims and/or political efforts. 4. The authors of Campbell Essential Biology note that the discovery of the structure and functions of DNA has led to a variety of DNA technologies. This technology is discussed in detail in Chapter 12.
  • #33: Student Misconceptions and Concerns 1. Contrasting the concept of faith with the tentative nature of science can help to define and distinguish science from other ways of knowing. Students sometimes enter science classes expecting absolutes of facts and rigid dogma. Instead, scientific knowledge is tentative, reflecting degrees of confidence closely correlated to the strength of the evidence. 2. The authors’ distinction between natural and supernatural explanations is essential to understanding the power and limits of scientific explanations. Teaching Tips 1. Consider using a laboratory exercise to have your students plan and perhaps conduct investigations using discovery science and a hypothesis-driven approach. Emphasize the processes and not the significance of the questions. Students can conduct descriptive surveys of student behavior (use of pens or pencils for taking notes, use of backpacks) or test hypotheses using controlled trials. Students may need considerable supervision and advice while planning and conducting their experiments. 2. Consider presenting your class with descriptions of several scientific investigations that you have written. Include in your descriptions numerous examples of improper methodology (small sample size, several variables existing between the control and experimental groups, failure to specifically test the hypothesis, etc.). Let small groups or individuals analyze the experiments in class to identify the flaws. This critical analysis allows students the opportunity to suggest the characteristics of good investigations in class. 3. Have your students explain why a coordinated c o nspiracy promoting a specific idea in science is unlikely to succeed. Have your students describe aspects of science that would check fraudulent or erroneous claims and/or political efforts. 4. The authors of Campbell Essential Biology note that the discovery of the structure and functions of DNA has led to a variety of DNA technologies. This technology is discussed in detail in Chapter 12.
  • #34: Figure 1.15 Applying the scientific method to a common problem. (Step 1)
  • #35: Figure 1.15 Applying the scientific method to a common problem. (Step 2)
  • #36: Figure 1.15 Applying the scientific method to a common problem. (Step 3)
  • #37: Figure 1.15 Applying the scientific method to a common problem. (Step 3)
  • #38: Student Misconceptions and Concerns 1. Contrasting the concept of faith with the tentative nature of science can help to define and distinguish science from other ways of knowing. Students sometimes enter science classes expecting absolutes of facts and rigid dogma. Instead, scientific knowledge is tentative, reflecting degrees of confidence closely correlated to the strength of the evidence. 2. The authors’ distinction between natural and supernatural explanations is essential to understanding the power and limits of scientific explanations. Teaching Tips 1. Consider using a laboratory exercise to have your students plan and perhaps conduct investigations using discovery science and a hypothesis-driven approach. Emphasize the processes and not the significance of the questions. Students can conduct descriptive surveys of student behavior (use of pens or pencils for taking notes, use of backpacks) or test hypotheses using controlled trials. Students may need considerable supervision and advice while planning and conducting their experiments. 2. Consider presenting your class with descriptions of several scientific investigations that you have written. Include in your descriptions numerous examples of improper methodology (small sample size, several variables existing between the control and experimental groups, failure to specifically test the hypothesis, etc.). Let small groups or individuals analyze the experiments in class to identify the flaws. This critical analysis allows students the opportunity to suggest the characteristics of good investigations in class. 3. Have your students explain why a coordinated c o nspiracy promoting a specific idea in science is unlikely to succeed. Have your students describe aspects of science that would check fraudulent or erroneous claims and/or political efforts. 4. The authors of Campbell Essential Biology note that the discovery of the structure and functions of DNA has led to a variety of DNA technologies. This technology is discussed in detail in Chapter 12.
  • #40: Student Misconceptions and Concerns 1. Contrasting the concept of faith with the tentative nature of science can help to define and distinguish science from other ways of knowing. Students sometimes enter science classes expecting absolutes of facts and rigid dogma. Instead, scientific knowledge is tentative, reflecting degrees of confidence closely correlated to the strength of the evidence. 2. The authors’ distinction between natural and supernatural explanations is essential to understanding the power and limits of scientific explanations. Teaching Tips 1. Consider using a laboratory exercise to have your students plan and perhaps conduct investigations using discovery science and a hypothesis-driven approach. Emphasize the processes and not the significance of the questions. Students can conduct descriptive surveys of student behavior (use of pens or pencils for taking notes, use of backpacks) or test hypotheses using controlled trials. Students may need considerable supervision and advice while planning and conducting their experiments. 2. Consider presenting your class with descriptions of several scientific investigations that you have written. Include in your descriptions numerous examples of improper methodology (small sample size, several variables existing between the control and experimental groups, failure to specifically test the hypothesis, etc.). Let small groups or individuals analyze the experiments in class to identify the flaws. This critical analysis allows students the opportunity to suggest the characteristics of good investigations in class. 3. Have your students explain why a coordinated c o nspiracy promoting a specific idea in science is unlikely to succeed. Have your students describe aspects of science that would check fraudulent or erroneous claims and/or political efforts. 4. The authors of Campbell Essential Biology note that the discovery of the structure and functions of DNA has led to a variety of DNA technologies. This technology is discussed in detail in Chapter 12.
  • #41: Student Misconceptions and Concerns 1. Contrasting the concept of faith with the tentative nature of science can help to define and distinguish science from other ways of knowing. Students sometimes enter science classes expecting absolutes of facts and rigid dogma. Instead, scientific knowledge is tentative, reflecting degrees of confidence closely correlated to the strength of the evidence. 2. The authors’ distinction between natural and supernatural explanations is essential to understanding the power and limits of scientific explanations. Teaching Tips 1. Consider using a laboratory exercise to have your students plan and perhaps conduct investigations using discovery science and a hypothesis-driven approach. Emphasize the processes and not the significance of the questions. Students can conduct descriptive surveys of student behavior (use of pens or pencils for taking notes, use of backpacks) or test hypotheses using controlled trials. Students may need considerable supervision and advice while planning and conducting their experiments. 2. Consider presenting your class with descriptions of several scientific investigations that you have written. Include in your descriptions numerous examples of improper methodology (small sample size, several variables existing between the control and experimental groups, failure to specifically test the hypothesis, etc.). Let small groups or individuals analyze the experiments in class to identify the flaws. This critical analysis allows students the opportunity to suggest the characteristics of good investigations in class. 3. Have your students explain why a coordinated c o nspiracy promoting a specific idea in science is unlikely to succeed. Have your students describe aspects of science that would check fraudulent or erroneous claims and/or political efforts. 4. The authors of Campbell Essential Biology note that the discovery of the structure and functions of DNA has led to a variety of DNA technologies. This technology is discussed in detail in Chapter 12.
  • #42: Student Misconceptions and Concerns 1. Contrasting the concept of faith with the tentative nature of science can help to define and distinguish science from other ways of knowing. Students sometimes enter science classes expecting absolutes of facts and rigid dogma. Instead, scientific knowledge is tentative, reflecting degrees of confidence closely correlated to the strength of the evidence. 2. The authors’ distinction between natural and supernatural explanations is essential to understanding the power and limits of scientific explanations. Teaching Tips 1. Consider using a laboratory exercise to have your students plan and perhaps conduct investigations using discovery science and a hypothesis-driven approach. Emphasize the processes and not the significance of the questions. Students can conduct descriptive surveys of student behavior (use of pens or pencils for taking notes, use of backpacks) or test hypotheses using controlled trials. Students may need considerable supervision and advice while planning and conducting their experiments. 2. Consider presenting your class with descriptions of several scientific investigations that you have written. Include in your descriptions numerous examples of improper methodology (small sample size, several variables existing between the control and experimental groups, failure to specifically test the hypothesis, etc.). Let small groups or individuals analyze the experiments in class to identify the flaws. This critical analysis allows students the opportunity to suggest the characteristics of good investigations in class. 3. Have your students explain why a coordinated c o nspiracy promoting a specific idea in science is unlikely to succeed. Have your students describe aspects of science that would check fraudulent or erroneous claims and/or political efforts. 4. The authors of Campbell Essential Biology note that the discovery of the structure and functions of DNA has led to a variety of DNA technologies. This technology is discussed in detail in Chapter 12.