Welcome! Here you will find copies of many of the labs that my
students perform in their Living Environment class.
Biochemistry
-
Growing Bacteria (aka Making Yogurt)
This lab can be used either in the context of Taxonomy (learning
about Bacteria) or Biochemistry (learning about Protein Chemistry)
or Metabolism (Lactic Acid Fermentation). Either way, it's fun to
watch the students' faces when they taste tart, plain yogurt for the
first time! I have 1/2 pint Mason jars that we do this in. I require
each group to make one jar of plan yogurt and then I allow them to
make one jar of flavored yogurt (flavored with honey, maple syrup,
vanilla, or different jams).
Biotechnology
-
Restriction Enzyme Digest Simulation
Use the power of a word processing program to simulate the action of
restriction enzymes on the actual lambda phage DNA sequence.
-
Cloning a Paper Plasmid
A nice quick paper demo on the process of cloning a gene into a
plasmid using a simulation of the puc18 plasmid & the Jellyfish Glo
gene sequence.
Animal Systems
-
Digestive System
After a lecture on the digestive system, students build a paper
model/poster of the system and answer quesions about its function.
They also have to place illustrations of digestive enzyme processes
in the correct location throughout the system.
-
Menstrual Cycle
After a lecture on the endocrine system and human reproduction,
students study the details of the menstrual cycle by graphing the
hormonal changes over the month and then tracking the changes on a
calendar comparing what happens when there is no fertilization vs.
when there is egg fertilization. This lab offers a lot of high-end
graphing practice and reinforcement for hormone-receptor
relationships.
-
Fetal Development Lab
I've expanded on a paper lab that our department has used for years.
Students are given data on fetal development (length, weight,
survival) to graph and to make conclusions about prenatal care. Then
students are presented with reference information about the prenatal
effects of alcohol, tobacco, and illegal drugs and asked to
summarize the effects and make conclusions.
-
The Spread of Disease (HIV Simulation)
This lab looks at the process of spreading disease amongst a group
of people sharing "body fluids". It's a fun simulation using a pH
indicator as the disease pathogen. If you so choose, students can
play roles by following the rules of behavior of different societal
stereotypes. You can tease students that the class is doing a lab
where they have to have sex 5 times during class ;-).
Click here to download the roles handout.
NOTES TO TEACHERS: I ask students to keep their
roles secret by not announcing it to anyone, but they must follow
the rules of the role throughout the exercise. Also, I usually make
only one student abstinent. LAB SET UP: I set up
two sets of clear plastic cups before class since I do the lab
activity twice (wth & without roles) -- one cup for each student for
each trial. Each cup has about 50-100mL of water in it (depending on
size of cup). And one cup has a strong squirt of NaOH added to it
(enough to still affect pH after 5 dilutions, but not strong enough
to be dangerous in the hands of students). When you hand out the
cups, you must keep track of which student started with that
"infected" cup, so you know Patient Zero. Students exchange body
fluids by having one student pour their cup into another, so the
fluids completely mix. Then the partner pours half back. They record
their partner's name and move onto another partner, mingling amongst
classmates. At the end, the teacher takes the role of doctor and
uses a squeeze bottle of phenolphthalein to test the cups. Often I
put on a white coat and stethoscope to play it up. If the liquid
turns red ("dread red", we call it) then the student is infected.
Cells
-
Microscopes
At the beginning of the cells unit, students get a detailed
refresher in how to use compound microscopes and, for many of them,
an introduction on the use of the dissecting microscope.
-
Cell Studies
To accompany the cells unit, students prepare and view stained
specimens of cheek cells, onion and Elodea plant cells, and
bacterial cells (prepared slides). Students are asked to identify
visible organelles and make comparisons between the different cell
types.
-
Diffusion Through A Membrane
An alternative to the State lab.
-
Osmosis Through A Membrane
An expansion beyond the state lab. Students specifically study
osmosis through dialysis tubing.
-
Plant Cell Plasmolysis
An alternative to the State lab, so that students focus on the onion
cell plasmolysis in a separate lab.
Ecology
-
Study of Population Density on a Suburban Lawn
Get the students out of the classroom to study ecology out on the
lawn! This is a sampling exercise to measure the population of weeds
living amongst the grass. You need to make quadrats to serve as
sampling units. I made them out of 1/2" PVC pipe -- 4 straight
pieces and 4 elbows. EASY!
-
Natural Controls of Populations
This is a graphing lab built around population data for the Kaibab
deer of the Grand Canyon and the moose of Isle Royale, Michigan. The
activity explores the concept of carrying capacity and the control
of population by predators.
-
Food Chains & Energy in Ecosystems
Through building a food chain and a biomass pyramid, students
explore the relationship between energy, biomass and trophic level.
The 10% rule is reinforced and bioaccumulation of toxins is
examined.
Enzymes & Metabolism
-
Pineapple Enzymes & Jell-O Molds
A kitchen chemistry lab to teach about the properties of proteins &
enzymes as well as the scientific method. Students are given a
series of supplies and are asked to design an experiment to test the
effect of temperature on enzymes by exploring the effects of using
fresh vs. cooked pineapple in Jell-o.
After reading this lab, I promise they'll never think of Jell-O in
the same way!
The teacher only needs to supply fresh (chopped) pineapple, fresh
(chopped) pineapple that has been frozen overnight, crushed canned
pineapple, boxes of Jell-O powder, and plastic Dixie cups.
-
Leaf Structure
Students explore leaf structure in the context of viewing it as a
set of adaptations which support photosynthesis. After a lecture on
leaf structure and photosynthesis, we look at a prepared slide
cross-section through a leaf. Students label a diagram, make their
own labeled drawing of the slide, and then, in a cut-and-paste
wrap-up, reconstruct a leaf from illustrations of the various
anatomical structures. In addition, students must integrate into the
drawing the sun and molecules of CO2, H2O, O2 as the cast of
relevant characters.
Download the molecule diagrams (each student only needs 1/4 of this
sheet).
-
Root Beer Fermentation (aka Alcohol Fermentation of Sucrose)
This laboratory exercise is a fun follow up to the metabolism unit.
Students get to investigate fermentation by making root beer (or
other flavored sodas). You can buy the champagne yeast and flavoring
from online vendors, like
Karp's
Homebrew Shop. I have found that the root beer actually works
the best and is appreciated by more students.
You need .25 grams yeast and 4 mL per pair of students. You will
need to collect 2 liter bottles for your mixing bottles and purchase
0.5 liter water bottles for the brewing water and for brewing the
root beer in. I warm the bottles up just by putting them in buckets
of hot water a period before class.
Evolution
-
Natural Selection in Butterflies
An enjoyable and educational simulation of natural selection through
a game of predator and prey in camouflaged butterfly populations.
This lab is based on a game invented by G. Ledyard Stebbins, a
pioneer in the evolution of plants. The purpose of the game is to
illustrate the basic principles and some of the general effects of
evolution by natural selection. The students take turns acting as
predators of butterflies camouflaged on various patterned cloth
backgrounds. The butterflies are played by colored dots that the
students can make with a hole punch and a few sheets of colored
cardstock. The change in the number of color variants is measured
from generation to generation. Fun. Simple. Instructive. See photos
of the
lab in action.
-
Evidence of Evolution
A lab that explores homologous, analogous and vestigial organs.
-
Evolutionary Relationships (aka the State's Biodiversity Lab)
An alternative adaptation of the State's Biodiversity lab. I have
concentrated on the evolutionary relationships aspect of the lab and
removed the biodiversity piece, to be done separately. At this time,
you will still need the first two pages of instructiions from the
State lab, but I have students write all answers in this version of
the lab.
Heredity: Genetics & Protein Synthesis
-
Protein Synthesis Lab
A paper-scissor-tape activity used to help students envision the
process of protein synthesis -- transcription, translation, and the
effect of mutations.
-
Paper Pet Genetics
A fun lab that alows students to practice genetics principles and
also understand the random recombinaion afforded by sexual
reproduction. Pairs of students work together to make a Paper Pet
family by flipping coins to first choose parental traits and then,
after developing Punnett squares, students again flip coins to see
what offspring will be born into this new family. They make a poster
of their new family as a final product.
Scientific Method
-
Graphing
A straight-forward lab that gives students practice in graphing
data.
|
|
|